Wildly OT: pop-up virtual keyboard for Mac or Linux?

wxjmfauth at gmail.com wxjmfauth at gmail.com
Wed Feb 11 04:17:52 EST 2015


Le mercredi 11 février 2015 09:49:57 UTC+1, wxjm... at gmail.com a écrit :
> Le mercredi 11 février 2015 09:12:30 UTC+1, wxjm... at gmail.com a écrit :
> > Le mercredi 11 février 2015 08:31:21 UTC+1, Marko Rauhamaa a écrit :
> > > Kushal Kumaran <kushal at locationd.net>:
> > > 
> > > > For very, very occasional use in emacs, there's C-x 8 RET (insert-char).
> > > 
> > > Emacs to the rescue, as usual.
> > > 
> > > I use emacs for all of my typing needs. If I stray on a Web form, I end
> > > up cussing at the browser whenever I instinctively hit a C-n, C-a or C-s
> > > (or, yesterday, C-w).
> > > 
> > > As for typing "special" characters, I have written a .Xmodmap file that
> > > rebinds my keyboard for various languages I use regularly. Then, I have
> > > this text file that contains specimens for many other useful characters.
> > > 
> > > 
> > > Marko
> > 
> > In my interactive Python interpreter, I can
> > enter all these chars (any unicode char) directly from
> > the main keyoard (a lot of work).
> > 
> > Python 3.2.5 (default, May 15 2013, 23:06:03) [MSC v.1500 32 bit (Intel)] on win32
> > >>> eta runs etazero.py...
> > ...etazero has been executed
> > >>> print('abc°é€œሴ䕧葖’éऋ')
> > abc°é€œሴ䕧葖’éऋ
> > >>> 
> > 
> > As you can see, it's Python 32.
> > Rusy: The last char is a Devanagari char.
> > 
> > jmf
> 
> 
> Just a check: It was sent via Google group, it is rendered
> correctly.
> 
> Addendum: bidi example, Arabic and Hebrew letters.
> 
> >>> print('abسאבحxyz')
> abسאבحxyz
> 
> Hebrew works fine, not so sure about arabic text.

Ok, it is also rendered correctly.
After all, this google group is not so bad.

jmf



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