On Tue, May 10, 2011 at 05:42, Duncan <1i5t5.duncan@xxxxxxx> wrote: > Dotan Cohen posted on Tue, 10 May 2011 00:58:57 +0300 as excerpted: > >> On a fresh install of Kubuntu 11.04 (KDE 4.6.3) I cannot access Krunner >> or any other Alt-F* shortcuts. What might be the cause of this? The >> keyboard works fine, tested on another computer, and I tried a second >> keyboard here as well. > > It may be that for some reason it's using a keyboard mapping your not used > to, and for instance, alt and ctrl are reversed, or one alt key is mapped > to something other than alt. > > Try running xev from a konsole window, then hitting keys to see how they > are registered. Â(Keypresses and mouse movement and keys will be output to > the konsole window.) > > If they're showing up there as expected (see the keysym parenthetical in > the middle of the third line of each key event, to see what X is > interpreting it as), the next question is what is kde doing with them? > > In kcontrol (systemsettings that aren't systemsettings, they're user- > specific kde specific settings!), common appearance and behavior, global > keyboard shortcuts, select run command interface from the dropdown, and > click on run command, to see its settings. > > You can also try changing them. ÂHit the button beside the custom radio- > button and enter the key you want to use. ÂIf you hit a modifier like alt, > it'll show up with a plus beside it, indicating that you need to hit a non- > modifier key as well. ÂIn this way you can both test to be sure that kde > is actually seeing the various keys and see what they show up as, AND > remap to some other shortcut, if necessary. > > You can similarly remap the other alt-F* shortcuts, if necessary. > > Hopefully you'll be able to take it from there, or at least report > results, if not. ÂThe big questions are (1) is X seeing the keys and what > is it reporting them as, assuming it does see them, and (2) what is kde > doing with these keys? ÂThese procedures are what I first turn to, to > diagnose such problems. ÂFixing them... well, let's see what the diagnosis > shows, first. > Duncan, it turns out to actually be in fact problem with the keyboard layout! I wrote my own, but Alt (and some other keys) are broken: http://dotancohen.com/eng/noah_ergonomic_keyboard_layout.html If anyone knows how to configure meta keys in xkb I'd love to hear from you on- or off-list (it's not a KDE problem). Thanks! -- 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.