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d92a248c
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2020-02-05T17:42:06
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API to query modifier set required to type a keysym
The new API is useful to implement features like auto-type and
desktop automation. Since the inputs for these features is usually
specified in terms of the symbols that need to be typed, the
implementation needs to be able to invert the keycode->keysym
transformation and produce a sequence of keycodes that can be used
to type the requested character(s).
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0345aba0
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2020-02-12T23:44:42
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Support translation Unicode codepoints to keysyms
In order to support features like auto-type and UI automation, the
relevant tools need to be able to invert the keycode->keysym->text
transformation. In order to facilitate that, a new API was added.
It allows querying the keysyms that correspond to particular Unicode
codepoints. For all practical purposes, it can be thought of as an
inverse of xkb_keysym_to_utf32().
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18d6aebe
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2017-12-11T22:41:55
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keysym: add xkb_keysym_to_{lower,upper} to public API
These can be useful in some odd cases.
There is already an implementation (+ tests) for internal use, so all
that's needed is to export them.
If xkbcommon were to provide a way to convert a Unicode codepoint to a
keysym, this could have been implemented externally as follows:
uint32_t codepoint = xkb_keysym_to_utf32(keysym);
uint32_t upper_codepoint = my_unicode_library_to_upper(codepoint);
xkb_keysym_t upper_keysym = theoretical_xkb_keysym_from_utf32(upper_codepoint);
However keysym -> codepoint is not injective so such a function is not
possible strictly speaking.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
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a0a41332
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2016-02-27T19:06:14
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state: allow different modes for calculating consumed modifiers
The current functions dealing with consumed modifiers use the
traditional XKB definition of consumed modifiers (see description in the
added documentation). However, for several users of the library (e.g.
GTK) this definition is unsuitable or too eager. This is exacerbated by
some less-than-ideal xkeyboard-config type definitions (CTRL+ALT seems
to cause most grief...).
So, because we
- want to enable alternative interpretations, but
- don't want to expose too much internal details, and
- want to keep things simple for all library users,
we add a high-level "mode" parameter which selects the desired
interpretation. New ones can be added as long as they make some sense.
All of the old consumed-modifiers functions keep using the traditional
("XKB") mode. I mark xkb_state_mod_mask_remove_consumed() and as
deprecated without adding a *2 variant because I don't it is very useful
(or used) in practice.
Alternative modes are added in subsequent commits (this commit only adds
a mode for the existing behavior).
https://github.com/xkbcommon/libxkbcommon/issues/17
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
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1c6d21b4
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2016-03-13T20:42:39
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Add symbol versions forgotten in 0ce17ef3ea3722c1cfe7af3
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
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b92f7924
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2014-10-18T16:38:13
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Change initial symbol file versions to V_0.5.0
It will be quite confusing to use V_0.4.3 since this was already
released without symbol versioning.
Hopefully this doesn't cause any trouble for people who are using -git.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
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edc98b54
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2014-09-12T18:44:30
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compose: add xkbcommon-compose - implementation
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
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1ba7d9ec
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2014-09-19T12:35:52
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doc: reorder "Keymap Components" functions
Put the general keymap stuff before key-specific functions.
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
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5444f6a8
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2014-09-09T19:08:46
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build: use symbol versioning
Symbol versions provide a means by which ELF utilities can determine
whether a program is incompatible with a too-old library version so
that package management tools can autodetect version-based
dependencies and suggest upgrade paths.
[ran: swap xkbcommon.map and xkbcommon-x11.map]
Signed-off-by: Jan Engelhardt <jengelh@inai.de>
Signed-off-by: Ran Benita <ran234@gmail.com>
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