Sujet : Re: For me, gShift b20 is double quote (").
De : vallor (at) *nospam* cultnix.org (vallor)
Groupes : comp.os.linux.advocacyDate : 27. May 2024, 00:56:03
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <v30em3$3k86l$2@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
User-Agent : Pan/0.158 (Avdiivka; 9555b5e; Linux-6.9.2)
On Sun, 26 May 2024 15:44:14 -0700 (Seattle), "Relf"
<
Usenet@Jeff-Relf.Me> wrote in <
Jeff-Relf.Me@May.26--3.44pm.Seattle.2024>:
Your gShift is Ctrl.
For me, button 20 is Ctrl; i.e. "b20 Wheel" Zooms.
gShift b20 is double quote (").
You can't do this (above), you don't have the drivers.
You're talking nonsense.
I can map any X event to any keypress. X is flexible that
way -- and you would do well to learn more about it, because
MS Windows may be using it someday...
(That is to say: using it more than it is already being
used in WSL, the Linux component in Windows.)
XMODMAP(1) General Commands Manual XMODMAP(1)
NAME
xmodmap - utility for modifying keymaps and pointer but‐
ton mappings in X
SYNOPSIS
xmodmap [-options ...] [filename]
DESCRIPTION
The xmodmap program is used to edit and display the key‐
board modifier map and keymap table that are used by
client applications to convert event keycodes into
keysyms. It is usually run from the user's session
startup script to configure the keyboard according to
personal tastes.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
Give it up, Jeff: you're stuck in DOS land.
(Also, my mouse doesn't have a "b20" -- it's "g20", a game button.)
-- -v