
Martin, maybe Softmaker should consider a "Known Issues" Document with Linux installations so this sort of issue doesn't get dragged out like this in the future? Just my 2 farthings. Prospective users would certainly appreciate it.
So did this change work for you as well?
Em dashes will work again with the compose key with the next service pack.vtpoet wrote: ↑Wed Jun 06, 2018 12:00 amYes. Downgraded on the exact same system:
1. Which distribution exactly is used (32bit or 64bit)?
System: Host: ThinkPad Kernel: 4.10.17-041017-generic x86_64 bits: 64 Desktop: KDE Plasma 5.12.5
Distro: Ubuntu 18.04 LTS
Machine: Device: laptop System: LENOVO product: 20HF0012US v: ThinkPad T470s serial: N/A
Mobo: LENOVO model: 20HF0012US v: SDK0J40697 WIN serial: N/A
UEFI: LENOVO v: N1WET31W (1.10 ) date: 04/17/2017
2. When you installed the Linux, which system language, which regional settings and (most important) which keyboard settings and drivers have you chosen in the setup?
System Language: English
Regional Setting: New York US
Keyboard Settings: English (intl. with AltGr dead keys) & German (de)
3. Have you installed any additional tools that affect or control the keyboard?
Set Compose Key to CapsLock
4. Which keys exactly did you type in TextMaker to write an accented character?
So, interestingly, the em-dash was the key affected by the upgrade. As I wrote, invoking the em-dash requires: CapsLock + ---
That gets you: —
Currently using:
apt policy softmaker*
softmaker-office-2018:
Installed: 2786
Candidate: 2786
Version table:
*** 2786 100
100 /var/lib/dpkg/status
If I upgrade, the compose key for the em-dash stops working. This is reproducible %100 of the time. When I press the first of the three dashes after Capslock, it doesn't appear, then the second two appear.
To me is the very same problem with spanish, is does happens THE SAME I can not write any accented vowel, it writes the accent first and then the vowel: they appear, instead: 'a, ~a, ^a . Using opensuse, in all the other office applications it does not append.PitagorasCWB wrote: ↑Sun May 20, 2018 3:07 pm Hello, it seems there's a problem with input encoding.
I'm not able to insert characters like these: á, â, ã
They appear, instead: 'a, ~a, ^a
How to fix it?
Have you configured your system to use a Swedish UTF-8 locale? We pretty much expect that a Linux system these days is Unicode-enabled.