Hello Alexander,
On Sunday, February 13, 2000 at 04:11:57 GMT +0300 (which was 5:11 PM where I
live) [EMAIL PROTECTED] typed:
> Hi there!
> For Russian, it _is_. It's all the same as for you. When I need to
> start typing Russian rather then English (or whatever Latin-based
> language), I just press right Ctrl button once, which switches the
> keyboard.
I did not realize that, so it is much like my toggling Caps Lock. So
if I am typing in the editor and want to delete the next character, I
can use ctrl-g (I don't know why I would use that particular
keystroke, but I'm using your example.) When you switch between
Russian and Latin layouts using the ctrl key, does the behaviour of
presssing and holding ctrl and the key labeled as G change? (Does
that question make sense?)
> The alphabetical buttons are labeled twice each on Russian keyboard,
> so having switched the keyboard I just proceed typing without any
> modifiers, but the same buttons get completely different effect when
> pressed.
Ok, to reword my question above, what if you were pressing any
modifiers, does the behaviour of the other keys change when you are
in the two different layouts?
> For example, "G" gives "ð" when Russian keyboard layout is active.
So other than the labeling, is there *anything* different about your
keyboard to a Standard English Keyboard? Or is the function of an
international keyboard based entirely on software?
--
Thanks for writing
Januk
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Using The Bat! 1.39
under Windows 98 4.10 Build 2222 A
--
--------------------------------------------------------------
View the TBUDL archive at http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com
To send a message to the list moderation team double click here:
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To Unsubscribe from TBUDL, double click here and send the message:
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
--------------------------------------------------------------
You are subscribed as : archive@jab.org