Hi Sérgio and André
After I wrote the last email, I became aware that I might be
misunderstood and silently declassified as a moron.
The key composition as such *does* work, however it seems to be
implemented with an unmodifiable set of standard compose-keys, either
hard-coded or based on a
Hi André
I must apologize: you are right, and /home/user/.XCompose actually
works. One thing I didn't notice until now was that together with the
upgrade to KDE 5, all Compose files on my local machine were overwritten
with their original versions — a very rude thing to do to a user who
alre
Hi Sérgio and André
Thanks for your replies, which both pointed out that the proposal has
not died but rather got a new number.
But why was it never implemented? Or does it need to be activated in a
particular way? None of the suggested integrations of the Compose key
file works out of the
Em segunda-feira, 17 de outubro de 2016, às 12:45:32 PDT, Dominik Wezel
escreveu:
> How do I make Qt use my key composition table? Or is there an
> alternative, equally versatile format for key composition in Qt?
Upgrade. That was fixed over 3 years ago.
--
Thiago Macieira - thiago.macieira (A
On Mon, Oct 17, 2016 at 11:45 AM, Dominik Wezel wrote:
> Hi
>
> I had to upgrade to KDE 5 recently. One of the first things I immediately
> noticed was that my key composition table was no longer working. In earlier
> versions, I managed to force Qt and GTK to use XIM, which supported my huge
>
Hi
I had to upgrade to KDE 5 recently. One of the first things I
immediately noticed was that my key composition table was no longer
working. In earlier versions, I managed to force Qt and GTK to use XIM,
which supported my huge additions to
/usr/share/X11/locale/en_US.UTF-8/Compose.
As a