Hi, On 9/12/22 23:20, Peter wrote: > Hi all, > > > Op maandag 12 september 2022 om 15:14:09 +0200 schreef Juerd Waalboer > <ju...@tnx.nl>: >> Hans de Goede skribis 2022-09-12 7:16 (+0200): >>> During a big hacker event in the Netherlands this summer (MCH) the logistics >>> team used custom barcodes to keep track of inventory. These custom barcodes >>> contain a # symbol. >> >> In other barcodes, @ symbols. Quite possibly anything with shifted >> characters; I vaguely recall a mixed case (ascii) string where the >> uppercasing was on the wrong letter. > > Yes, that definitely also happened. > >> >>> Juerd, we did not discuss how you were running Wayland (which compositor), >>> I guess you were using GNOME3 when you hit this ? >> >> I'm not sure, as I only encountered the bug as an end user and suggested >> changing to X to work around it (which worked). I've added Peter Hazenberg >> to the CC list; he installed and maintained the computers, and is familiar >> with the bug. Peter, can you confirm that we were using GNOME 3 in both >> Wayland and X? > > Yes, we used gnome 3. It was mostly a boring default Fedora 36 Workstation > installation. > > Good to hear Hans already reproduced the issue at the mentioned hackerspace, > I assume with the exact same hardware
Yes I reproduced it on my own laptop inside a terminal under GNOME3. I suspect that it reproduces on any (VTE based?) terminal running under GNOME3 Wayland when using the right barcode-scanner model and scanning specific barcodes. . Regards, Hans