On 5 July 2010 13:31, Duncan <1i5t5.duncan@xxxxxxx> wrote: > Well, you'd need at least qt3 and kdelibs3 installed as well (if it's > indeed a kde3 app, not simply a qt3 app calling itself k*). > Qt4 alone is fine, but Qt3 + Qt4 bogs down my system terribly. I guess that means that it's a no-go. > A quick google at google.com/linux for "ksensors", first hit is the > sourceforge homepage, last release from 2k4. Doesn't seem so hard to me. > Searching for """kde applet "Character Selector"""" doesn't get me any closer to something that I could download and play with! Just a lot of frustrated KDE 4 users in the same boat as myself! By the way, there exists this bug: https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=190776 And I see that we discussed this a few months ago! > FWIW, I'm quite happy with the yasp-scripted plasmoid from kdelook, as > it's quite flexible indeed. In fact, I sent the author several of my > scripts and a screenshot with them running, and they've been shipped in > the tarball for some time now. Additionally, I've rather adopted it, > subscribing to the comment feed and answering questions, etc, as they're > posted. > > Or if you want something even more flexible, consider superkaramba themes > (which plasma can run too). In addition to the variety of themes for it > available on kdelook, it's basically yasp-scripted on steroids, as it > allows horizontal placement not just vertical stacks like yasp-scripted. > At some point I'll probably upgrade to it and run just a single master > instance of it with all the stuff I'm following now as sub-themes, instead > of the multiple yasp-scripted instances I'm running now, since yasp- > scripted only stacks vertically, not horizontally. But being more > flexible, superkaramba's also somewhat more complex to learn, and at the > time I adopted yasp-scripted to replace my ksysguard kicker applet with > all its real-time reports, I I had my hands full trying to get the rest of > my usual desktop config converted to kde4, and I went with the simpler > yasp-scripted in ordered to actually get something up and running. > No, I'm not looking for a system monitor plasmoid, I need to insert a few special characters often (mostly non-printing characters but also a few combining characters). Maybe I should look into just making my own keyboard layout! > You could do what I've done sometimes, and save a file with just the few > characters you want. Then you can open in and select/paste or copy/paste > as desired. Of course, with a case such as the zero-space joiner that's > of immediate interest, I'd probably place it between two other characters, > select/copy/paste all three, then delete the ones on either side, to make > it easier to actually grab it, but that's only a tiny adaptation on the > theme... > I am doing this with Zim-wiki, but it is not good for the non-printing characters and cumbersome with the combining characters. In KDE 3 this was a non-issue. -- Dotan Cohen http://gibberish.co.il http://what-is-what.com ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.