Žinutės: 37
Kalba: English
eojeff (Rodyti profilį) 2015 m. gegužė 10 d. 15:09:43
Tempodivalse (Rodyti profilį) 2015 m. gegužė 10 d. 17:38:50
eojeff:Yes, in Ubuntu it's just a check-box: "Use Esperanto circumflexes" or similar. After that right-Alt + c will give you ĉ and so forth. However, in the current long term support release (LTS) this option has vanished from the system settings. The option is still available from the gnome tweak tool if you have it installed. I should probably write up a guide because it took me a long time to find this when I upgraded to the current long term support release of Ubuntu.Is this only for Unity, or for other DEs as well (KDE, Mate, etc)?
Hound_of_God (Rodyti profilį) 2015 m. gegužė 11 d. 23:56:36
eojeff: I should probably write up a guide because it took me a long time to find this when I upgraded to the current long term support release of Ubuntu.Please do. I can't seem to make the option work in Ubuntu Gnome.
eojeff (Rodyti profilį) 2015 m. gegužė 12 d. 00:15:24
Tempodivalse:Is this only for Unity, or for other DEs as well (KDE, Mate, etc)?Well, I know it works with the Unity desktop. I haven't tried it with other desktop environments.
malplenegen (Rodyti profilį) 2015 m. gegužė 12 d. 20:47:08
setxkbmap epo
Or, in case you want to type Hebrew:
setxkbmap il
And so on. Check out available layouts in /usr/share/X11/xkb/symbols/ directory.
faust_twi (Rodyti profilį) 2015 m. gegužė 13 d. 03:23:00
hilex (Rodyti profilį) 2015 m. gegužė 13 d. 03:37:15
faust_twi:ni bezonas alia alfabeto por esperanto. sen afrikatoj.La tia jam ekzistas. Tio estas cirila alfabeto.
Uzante Linukso mi ne suferas pro tiu problemo. La ĉapeletoj plaĉas al mi.