Le 23/07/2018 à 15:23, Rene Engelhard a écrit :
On Fri, Jul 20, 2018 at 11:07:40AM +0200, Rene Engelhard wrote:
close 89153 1:6.0.6~rc1-1
thanks
[...]
What about the 6.1.0 rc1 in experimental? Is it fixed there, too?

I didn't find 6.1.0 in the experimental repository for the amd64
architecture, it was still 1:6.0.6~rc1-1 (6.1.0 was there only
for ppc64 and alpha architectures).

(or only in rc2 - which isn't officially released yet). Since
[...]
(I plan to upload said 6.1.0 rc2 to unstable soonish after it "survived"
a test build in experimenal when it's there and uploaded.)

Ping? :)

That now happened.

OK, I have tried this 6.1.0~rc2-2 from unstable. The unicode
input shortcut works.


Would try myself, but apparently I am not skkilled anpough to actually
make Ctrl-U 61 print anything else than a "61". How are you supposed to
do that?

Maybe you forgot the "shift"? I used uppercase U in the description
of the shortcut to denote that, it was probably not explicit, sorry.
I should probably have written it as Ctrl-Shift-U. See
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode_input#In_X11_(Linux_and_Unix_variants)> or <https://help.gnome.org/users/gnome-help/stable/tips-specialchars.html.en#ctrlshiftu>. Once you have entered the prefix
Ctrl-shift-u, an underlined 'u' should appear to show that the
next character will be a unicode code point, and this undelined u should
disappear when you enter the code point (in hexadecimal) and end b

You can try with 61 for the ASCII character for 'a', or 03B1 for
greek alpha (α), or 2202 for the mathematical partial differential symbol (∂), or 2026 for the ellipsis…

best regards,
Luc


Regards,
Rene



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