Everything I read says it’s a feature enabled in what ever compositor you choose, if your compositor supports it. Why isn’t there a general purpose keybinding program like setxkbmap? Does it just not exist yet or must it be built into the compositor?

I’ve read [this stackexchange thread] on something related but it all seems to be using XKB which should imply I’m using XWayland?

  • PAPPP@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    I just tried keyd a day or two ago and I’m super taken with it.

    I just wanted to make Meta+Arrows generate PgUp/PgDn/Home/End because I’ve really grown to like laptops that do that with Fn (And I was playing with a hacked Chromebook whose keyboard does those soft with Ctrl+Shift+Arrow in software on ChromeOS so you’ve got to do something).

    I’m quite impressed. The configuration format is sane, the daemon’s runtime footprint is tiny, and it works across VTs, X, and Wayland because it’s a virtual keyboard emitting events. The historical options have like…0-1 of those properties. Also the virtual keyboard takes bus ID 0fac:0ade, and who doesn’t like a god hex pun.

    • baduhai@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      Yep keyd is fantastic. I also have a chromebook laptop which I installed NixOS on, and the keyboard is an absolute disaster. Keyd has been a god send.

      • PAPPP@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 year ago

        How is NixOS on a Chromebook? The Chromebook I’ve been hacking on exists as a beater for trying environments without disrupting the (principally Arch+KDE on X) boxes I do my real work on, and I was thinking about trying Nix on it, but it seemed like the combination of 16GB eMMC and Nix’s propensity for large disc usage would make that difficult.

        • baduhai@sopuli.xyz
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          1 year ago

          16GB eMMC and Nix

          Yeah, that ain’t gonna work.

          On my chromebook, it runs great. But I have a 128gb ssd. The only things that don’t work are hdmi audio and automatically switching from speakers to the audio jack.