2021-01-11 17:34:38 +00:00
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---
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title: "Typing International Characters"
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description: "Setting up your keyboard so you can type international characters such as ß, ñ, and ü in addition to a myriad of others (™, ©, ¢, €, ∵, ∞, §, ¶, etc.)"
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2021-11-10 08:07:08 +00:00
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author: Amolith
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2021-01-11 17:34:38 +00:00
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date: 2020-04-08T13:21:39-04:00
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2023-03-19 23:39:36 +00:00
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draft: false
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2021-01-11 17:34:38 +00:00
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tags:
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- Keyboard
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- Typing
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- Writing
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- International
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- Typography
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categories:
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- Technology
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cover: /assets/pngs/keyboard.png
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toc: true
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---
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2021-06-26 20:51:30 +00:00
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My first computer was an [Acer C710
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Chromebook.](https://www.cnet.com/products/acer-c710-2055-chromebook/specs/)
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There were a *lot* of problems with it but one thing I always
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appreciated were its dead keys. Until a few days ago, I had *completely*
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forgotten what the feature was called. Once I figured it out, however, I
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was able to do some digging and find the answer fairly quickly.
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## Dead keys
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Dead keys[^1] are actually a type of modifier, like `Ctrl` or `Shift`.
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They allow people to type accented characters that don't appear on their
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keyboard. For example, I have a US keyboard and there is no enye (the
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diactric[^2] mark over the ñ) as can be found on Spanish and Latin
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American layouts.
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I'm not exactly sure why but dead keys don't have to be held down when
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you want to use them but they don't; simply strike the dead key then the
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character you intend to modify and the resulting accented character will
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be rendered properly.
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Dead keys allow writers to use far more characters that just the
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accented ones found in various alphabets. Indeed, one can type a *very*
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wide variety of symbols:
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``` text
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™ © ® § ¶ ∵ € ¢ ¥ ⅞ x³ ∞ ¬ ÷ ± × ≠ ♪ ♬ ♭ ♮ ♯ → ⇒ ☭ ㉔ ⓐ ß æ ø Œ
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```
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2021-06-26 20:51:30 +00:00
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The full list of all possible combinations (on Linux) can be found in
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[the documentation from David
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Monniaux.](https://cgit.freedesktop.org/xorg/lib/libX11/plain/nls/en_US.UTF-8/Compose.pre)
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For a shorter but easier-to-read list, refer to the [GtkComposeTable
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from Ubuntu.](https://help.ubuntu.com/community/GtkComposeTable)
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## Compose key
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If you write code *at all*, enabling dead keys alone would be an
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absolute *nightmare*. To get double quotes, you would have type `"` then
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`Space` every single time. The same goes for `'`, `:`, `;`, `~`, etc.
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The compose key[^3] makes this *much* less of an issue. When struck, it
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indicates that the next few keys (2 or more) are to function as dead
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keys. With this enabled, you can write code without abusing your space
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bar but also type résumé[^4] correctly.
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I have found this absolutely invaluable in my German course. I am able
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to type something like *Linux ist großartig* without searching "eszet"
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and copying it from Wikipedia[^5].
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## Usage
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How you enable dead keys or the compose key depends *entirely* on your
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operating system. I'm sure most Linux distributions that ship with a
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DE[^6] like [GNOME,](https://www.gnome.org/) [KDE,](https://kde.org/)
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[XFCE,](https://xfce.org/) etc. will have a GUI option in the settings.
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I use [Arch Linux](https://archlinux.org/) with
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[i3-gaps](https://github.com/Airblader/i3) and thus don't have a GUI to
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manage these kinds of things. That's where the [Arch
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Wiki](https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/) comes in.
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Depending on whether you want dead keys or a compose key, there are
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different commands to run. I'm not sure how to enable the former—you'll
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need to read [the page for
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that](https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Xorg/Keyboard_configuration)
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yourself—but mapping an existing key to compose is really easy.
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List what your options are
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``` text
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grep "compose:" /usr/share/X11/xkb/rules/base.lst
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```
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Copy which first column you want and paste it into this command
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``` text
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setxkbmap -option <option-goes-here>
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```
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I mapped mine to the right `Alt` key as I never use it and it's near the space bar. The command for that would simply be:
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``` text
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setxkbmap -option compose:ralt
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```
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For other interesting things you can do with your keyboard, check [that
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whole
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section](https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Xorg/Keyboard_configuration#Frequently_used_XKB_options)
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of the Arch Wiki. It's really one of the best resources there is for
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this kind of thing.
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## Edit
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2021-06-26 20:51:30 +00:00
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Since the time of publication, I've started using
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[Wayland](https://wayland.freedesktop.org/) and configuring your
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keyboard with `setxkbmap` doesn't work. Instead, assuming you're running
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[sway,](https://github.com/swaywm/sway/) add something along this vein
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to your config. If you want to use something other than your right `Alt`
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key, make sure you change that.
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``` text
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input type:keyboard xkb_options compose:ralt
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```
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2021-06-26 20:51:30 +00:00
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[^1]: They're called dead keys because, with most keyboards and
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operating systems, there is no visual indication that it's been
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struck; the key appears to be dead.
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[^2]: [Dictionary.com](https://www.dictionary.com/browse/diacritic?s=t):
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"*a mark, point, or sign added or attached to a letter or character
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to distinguish it from another of similar form, to give it a
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particular phonetic value, to indicate stress, etc.*”
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[^3]: Also known as a *multi key*
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[^4]: Yes, résumé is the correct spelling. Resume is *accepted* but it's
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*more* correct with the diacritical[^2] marks.
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[^5]: I also had to do the same when I wanted to add an
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[umlaut](https://wikipedia.org/wiki/Diaeresis_(diacritic)) to
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anything, as in *über*
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[^6]: *DE* is short for *Desktop Environment*. If you're not familiar
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with the term, a DE is basically a suite of applications and
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programs that make up the interface a computer user interacts with.
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The dock on macOS, the start menu on Windows, your file manager,
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these are all examples of *tightly* integrated applications that
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provide the core functionality of whatever operating system you use.
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