On lunes, 12 de junio de 2017 10:32:17 -03 Allan Sandfeld Jensen wrote: > On Montag, 12. Juni 2017 10:17:50 CEST René J. V. Bertin wrote: > > Allan Sandfeld Jensen wrote: > > > I am on Debian and found the same thing. Apt-get remove im-config solves > > > the issue. Apparently it is a buggy package that forces Qt to use ibus > > > without ensuring ibus is launched. > > > > That's not what I saw. Ibus was always launched at login, and im-config > > seems to get some length to ensure that applications always use the "best" > > method available if the user didn't configure things to use a specific > > method. That's why newly launched Qt applications work fine after exiting > > ibus. The loss of keyboard input in Qt5 applications is a priori not a > > packaging fault but a regression in Qt itself. > > > > > Btw. In a similar vain of packages having a negative impact on Qt. I > > > also > > > recomment uninstalling at-spi2-core which sets the environment variable > > > to > > > force accessibility always on which has a big negative performance > > > impact.
Right. We where asked to turn it on by default by the a11y team (CCIng). Granted we did not know it meant that it will have such a negative impact in performance. > > Thanks for the suggestion, at least I could uninstall that one without > > taking a sh*load of other packages along with it... > > What env. variable would that be (I don't want to log off and on AGAIN > > just > > yet > > > > :)) > > QT_LINUX_ACCESSIBILITY_ALWAYS_ON > > It forces Qt to send accessibility events with new content trees everything > something changes. > > Though the real problem might be that Linux lacks a good way to enable > accessibility interfaces at runtime. On macOS and Windows, the same > performance impact is only enabled if you start using a system accessibility > feature. That's possibly it. A11y team: do you think we can start this only if the right hardware is detected? -- Mi experiencia me dice que lo que la gente quiere y necesita -en Indonesia, en Turquía, en Italia, en los Estados Unidos, en Brasil, en la Argentina o donde sea- es básicamente lo mismo. La gente quiere comida en la mesa, una vivienda básica, un gobierno que funcione, que en las fuerzas de seguridad haya personas confiables, a las que no tengan que tenerles miedo, educación y salud. ¡La gente de todo el mundo quiere lo mismo! Padre Thomas Michel, jesuita, especialista en diálogo interreligioso, en una entrevista de Elisabetta Piqué para La Nación, 27/09/2006. http://www.lanacion.com.ar/844069 Lisandro Damián Nicanor Pérez Meyer http://perezmeyer.com.ar/ http://perezmeyer.blogspot.com/
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