Remy Blank wrote:
> The problem is not important enough to justify spending so much of
> your and my time on it.
It was worth my time: I now have working volume keys. :) I had
never bothered to find out how to make them work, as I seldom play
music. This was a nice occasion.
I still think th
Benno Schulenberg wrote:
> If you've done so and it still doesn't work,
> try grepping through ~/.kde for XF86AudioStop and such: maybe they
> are doubly defined somewhere.
Did that, but could only find one definition for each. Setting the
symlinks you suggested in your previous message didn't
Remy Blank wrote:
> Benno Schulenberg wrote:
> > Meanwhile I've figured out
> > how to create actions such as "Mute" and "Volume Up" and assign
> > them shortcuts.
>
> I didn't have to do anything to get those working, except make
> sure kmix is loaded on login. It seems that it automatically
> int
Benno Schulenberg wrote:
> Meanwhile I've figured out
> how to create actions such as "Mute" and "Volume Up" and assign
> them shortcuts.
I didn't have to do anything to get those working, except make sure kmix
is loaded on login. It seems that it automatically interpreted the
volume controls co
Remy Blank wrote:
> Benno Schulenberg wrote:
> > There are just no actions like "Play", "Volume Down" or "Mute"
> > that I could assign XF86AudioPlay, XF86AudioLowerVolume or
> > XF86AudioMute to.
>
> Ok, I get it, sorry. I don't want to assign them to "Play" or
> other audio actions. I want XF86Au
Remy Blank wrote:
> Benno Schulenberg wrote:
> > as I said: there are no multimedia-related actions
> > like Play or Stop or Mute there, [...]
>
> As far as I understand, the XF86* are key codes or events,
> defined and generated by the X server, in this case xorg-x11, and
> work exactly in the sam
Remy Blank wrote:
> Then, in the control center, select the function for which you
> want to assign a shortcut,
Yes, but as I said: there are no multimedia-related actions like
Play or Stop or Mute there, just windowing, editing and navigating
stuff. Do I need to emerge a certain KDE component
Benno Schulenberg wrote:
> Remy Blank wrote:
>> I had slightly changed the "inspiron" xkb mapping so that they
>> generated the right events (XF86AudioPlay, XF86AudioStop,
>> XF86AudioPrev, XF86AudioNext). Then, I defined a few keyboard
>> shortcuts in the KDE control center to trigger come actions
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