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X Strike Force XFree86 SVN commit: r1839 - in trunk/debian: . local



Author: branden
Date: 2004-09-21 13:21:04 -0500 (Tue, 21 Sep 2004)
New Revision: 1839

Modified:
   trunk/debian/CHANGESETS
   trunk/debian/local/FAQ.xhtml
Log:
Fix missing phrase.


Modified: trunk/debian/CHANGESETS
===================================================================
--- trunk/debian/CHANGESETS	2004-09-21 18:17:42 UTC (rev 1838)
+++ trunk/debian/CHANGESETS	2004-09-21 18:21:04 UTC (rev 1839)
@@ -51,6 +51,6 @@
 
 Add FAQ entry: My keyboard configuration worked with XFree86 4.2; why is
 it messed up now?  (Closes: #259740)
-    1823, 1832, 1835, 1836, 1838
+    1823, 1832, 1835, 1836, 1838, 1839
 
 vim:set ai et sts=4 sw=4 tw=80:

Modified: trunk/debian/local/FAQ.xhtml
===================================================================
--- trunk/debian/local/FAQ.xhtml	2004-09-21 18:17:42 UTC (rev 1838)
+++ trunk/debian/local/FAQ.xhtml	2004-09-21 18:21:04 UTC (rev 1839)
@@ -2685,18 +2685,18 @@
 One or more of the keys on their keyboards are engraved with more than two
 glyphs.  On a typical U.S. keyboard, there are at most two glyphs on each keycap
 &mdash; one is accessed with a <code>Shift</code> or <code>Caps Lock</code> key,
-and one without.  Many keyboards outside enable access to glyphs beyond the
-third with modifier keys not found on most U.S. keyboards.  One approach is with
-an <code>AltGr</code> (alternate group) key, which is analogous to
-<code>Shift</code>.  The other approach is with a <code>Mode Switch</code> key,
-which is analogous to <code>Caps Lock</code>.  When either of these keys are
-pressed, the X Window System needs to know to switch to an alternative key
-layout &mdash; preferably one which corresponds to the engravings on the user's
-keyboard.  A U.S. keyboard, even if keys are remapped so that <code>AltGr</code>
-and/or <code>Mode Switch</code> keys are available, does not acquire much
-meaningful additional functionality unless and alternate group is defined in
-software, so that "the keys know what to do" when the alternate group is
-enabled.</p>
+and one without.  Many keyboards outside the United States enable access to
+glyphs beyond the third with modifier keys not found on most U.S. keyboards.
+One approach is with an <code>AltGr</code> (alternate group) key, which is
+analogous to <code>Shift</code>.  The other approach is with a <code>Mode
+Switch</code> key, which is analogous to <code>Caps Lock</code>.  When either of
+these keys are pressed, the X Window System needs to know to switch to an
+alternative key layout &mdash; preferably one which corresponds to the
+engravings on the user's keyboard.  A U.S. keyboard, even if keys are remapped
+so that <code>AltGr</code> and/or <code>Mode Switch</code> keys are available,
+does not acquire much meaningful additional functionality unless and alternate
+group is defined in software, so that "the keys know what to do" when the
+alternate group is enabled.</p>
 
 <p>Sometimes a key layout for a given territory (such as <code>gb</code> for the
 United Kingdom or <code>fr</code> for France) defines what should be in the



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