1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
|
// $XKeyboardConfig$
// $Xorg: keypad,v 1.3 2000/08/17 19:54:43 cpqbld Exp $
// The <KPDL> key is a mess.
// It was probably originally meant to be a decimal separator.
// Except since it was declared by USA people it didn't use the original
// SI separator "," but a "." (since then the USA managed to f-up the SI
// by making "." an accepted alternative, but standards still use "," as
// default)
// As a result users of SI-abiding countries expect either a "." or a ","
// or a "decimal_separator" which may or may not be translated in one of the
// above depending on applications.
// It's not possible to define a default per-country since user expectations
// depend on the conflicting choices of their most-used applications,
// operating system, etc. Therefore it needs to be a configuration setting
// Copyright © 2007 Nicolas Mailhot <nicolas.mailhot @ laposte.net>
// Legacy <KPDL> #1
// This assumes KP_Decimal will be translated in a dot
partial keypad_keys
xkb_symbols "dot" {
key.type[Group1]="KEYPAD" ;
key <KPDL> { [ KP_Delete, KP_Decimal ] }; // <delete> <separator>
};
// Legacy <KPDL> #2
// This assumes KP_Separator will be translated in a comma
partial keypad_keys
xkb_symbols "comma" {
key.type[Group1]="KEYPAD" ;
key <KPDL> { [ KP_Delete, KP_Separator ] }; // <delete> <separator>
};
// Period <KPDL>, usual keyboard serigraphy in most countries
partial keypad_keys
xkb_symbols "dotoss" {
key.type[Group1]="FOUR_LEVEL_MIXED_KEYPAD" ;
key <KPDL> { [ KP_Delete, period, comma, 0x100202F ] }; // <delete> . , ⍽ (narrow no-break space)
};
// Period <KPDL>, usual keyboard serigraphy in most countries, latin-9 restriction
partial keypad_keys
xkb_symbols "dotoss_latin9" {
key.type[Group1]="FOUR_LEVEL_MIXED_KEYPAD" ;
key <KPDL> { [ KP_Delete, period, comma, nobreakspace ] }; // <delete> . , ⍽ (no-break space)
};
// Comma <KPDL>, what most non anglo-saxon people consider the real separator
partial keypad_keys
xkb_symbols "commaoss" {
key.type[Group1]="FOUR_LEVEL_MIXED_KEYPAD" ;
key <KPDL> { [ KP_Delete, comma, period, 0x100202F ] }; // <delete> , . ⍽ (narrow no-break space)
};
// Momayyez <KPDL>: Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, UAE
partial keypad_keys
xkb_symbols "momayyezoss" {
key.type[Group1]="FOUR_LEVEL_MIXED_KEYPAD" ;
key <KPDL> { [ KP_Delete, 0x100066B, comma, 0x100202F ] }; // <delete> ? , ⍽ (narrow no-break space)
};
// Abstracted <KPDL>, pray everything will work out (it usually does not)
partial keypad_keys
xkb_symbols "kposs" {
key.type[Group1]="FOUR_LEVEL_MIXED_KEYPAD" ;
key <KPDL> { [ KP_Delete, KP_Decimal, KP_Separator, 0x100202F ] }; // <delete> ? ? ⍽ (narrow no-break space)
};
// Spreadsheets may be configured to use the dot as decimal
// punctuation, comma as a thousands separator and then semi-colon as
// the list separator. Of these, dot and semi-colon is most important
// when entering data by the keyboard; the comma can then be inferred
// and added to the presentation afterwards. Using semi-colon as a
// general separator may in fact be preferred to avoid ambiguities
// in data files. Most times a decimal separator is hard-coded, it
// seems to be period, probably since this is the syntax used in
// (most) programming languages.
partial keypad_keys
xkb_symbols "semi" {
key.type[Group1]="FOUR_LEVEL_MIXED_KEYPAD" ;
key <KPDL> { [ NoSymbol, NoSymbol, semicolon ] };
};
|