Flashnux

GNU/Linux man pages

Livre :
Expressions régulières,
Syntaxe et mise en oeuvre :

ISBN : 978-2-7460-9712-4
EAN : 9782746097124
(Editions ENI)

GNU/Linux

Debian 7.3.0

(Wheezy)

XkbGetNamedGeometry(3)


XkbGetNamedGeometry

XkbGetNamedGeometry

NAME
SYNTAX
ARGUMENTS
DESCRIPTION
DIAGNOSTICS

NAME

XkbGetNamedGeometry − Loads a keyboard geometry description from this database by name

SYNTAX

Status XkbGetNamedGeometry

(Display *dpy, XkbDescPtr xkb, Atom name);

ARGUMENTS

− dpy

connection to the X server

− xkb

keyboard description into which the geometry should be loaded

− name

name of the geometry to be loaded

DESCRIPTION

It is also possible to load a keyboard geometry by name. The X server maintains a database of keyboard components (see below).

XkbGetNamedGeometry can return BadName if the name cannot be found.

The X server maintains a database of keyboard components, identified by component type. The database contains all the information necessary to build a complete keyboard description for a particular device, as well as to assemble partial descriptions. Table 1 identifies the component types and the type of information they contain.

Image /web_man_pages/man_unzipped/en/debian/7/7.31.png

While a keymap is a database entry for a complete keyboard description, and therefore logically different from the individual component database entries, the rules for processing keymap entries are identical to those for the individual components. In the discussion that follows, the term component is used to refer to either individual components or a keymap.

There may be multiple entries for each of the component types. An entry may be either complete or partial. Partial entries describe only a piece of the corresponding keyboard component and are designed to be combined with other entries of the same type to form a complete entry.

For example, a partial symbols map might describe the differences between a common ASCII keyboard and some national layout. Such a partial map is not useful on its own because it does not include those symbols that are the same on both the ASCII and national layouts (such as function keys). On the other hand, this partial map can be used to configure any ASCII keyboard to use a national layout.

When a keyboard description is built, the components are processed in the order in which they appear in Table 1; later definitions override earlier ones.

DIAGNOSTICS

BadName

A font or color of the specified name does not exist.



XkbGetNamedGeometry(3)