Martin Kho wrote: > I have a strange issue. In the BIOS I've set the NumLock to on. During booting > it is turned off (huh..), so I have set 'Turn on' 'NumLock on KDE Startup' in > KDE. > I reported this bug on October 20, 2008 and it has remained unfixed through all the versions of fedora and rawhide since then. It is bz# 467790. I have tried setting bios numlock on, bios numlock off, kde to on, kde to off, kde to unchanged, but nothing works. Only a couple of weeks ago, after over 2 years of complaining on bugzilla, have I given up. I now have bios off, kde to unchanged, and the system boots with numlock off and I have to expressly turn it on when I use it. Admittedly, as I think the number pad is a bit useless and superfluous anyway, I don't use it much anyway. Prior to about fedora 7 or 6, this used to work correctly. > Since KDE 4.3.4, when I wanted to have quotes ('`"...) I needed to type an > extra space. Typically a wrong keyboard lay out was chosen!? I Just enabled > 'Enable keyboard layouts' in 'Regional & Language' and didn't change anything. > This solved the 'quotes-issue', but it turns off the NumLock-light (NumLock- > function is still turned on). > I am not really sure what is going on there and I am not a developer or programming expert. It sounds somewhat like there is a possibility that maybe you might be getting the excellent us-acentos (international) keyboard layout by default. If this is the case and you don't like it, you can disable it in system-settings, regional/keyboard. Enable keyboard layouts and make sure you have the evdev-managed keyboard, no matter what model you really have, select your language below, and under layout variant for your language, choose default to disable the international keyboard. If you want to give it a try after all, select international (with dead keys). This international is also known as acentos on the command line and it has the advantage of allowing the keys on the keyboard to work like they are supposed to, ie. the accents for many European and other languages really work (you type the accent, then the letter, and the accented character will be typed). When you want the accent typed as a character, then you type the right alt (sometimes AltGr) along with the character (note that many of the accent characters appear on the upper case level, so you have to type right-Alt-Shift plus the accent; I think there is also a way to do this with the space bar preceded by the accent character, but I have not used that method and am not sure exactly how it works). This takes a day or two to get used to, mainly when using the frequently occurring apostrophe and quotation mark, but once you are used to it, you will wonder how you ever got along without it. It allows you to type names and words correctly without having to enter cryptic codes or using cumbersome tools such as kcharselect to enter the characters.