
Le 28/12/2015 19:32, Devin Mullins a écrit :
The first result for https://www.google.com/search?q=xmonad+azerty looks good. Does that work?
Yes, it does, but this is not what I am hoping for. When I first tried xmonad, I encountered the link you pointed and used it but unfortunately, each time I tried to add another customization to my config file, it failed because for a non haskell-initiated user, it is *cryptic*. So I registered to this mailing list, got the help needed and can enjoy the power of xmonad but one shouldn't have to register to a mailing list to get xmonad working. The file Tuncer Ayaz has proposed contains several interesting customizations. To be fully useful, it should be very easy to use in most default keyboards on earth. Best regards, Alain
On Dec 28, 2015 10:53 AM, "Alain Bertrand"
mailto:alainbe@free.fr> wrote: Le 28/12/2015 14:51, Tuncer Ayaz a écrit :
> Here's a minimal, modern xmonad.hs, which we should include in the > announcement and ideally also on the website's getting started page. > Feel free to improve. > > import System.Exit
[snip quote]
Hi, all, May I had a suggestion : add as a comment what is needed to use xmonad with AZERTY keyboards, where defaults for 1234567890 are &é"'(-è_çà . Ideally, one should have only to uncomment a few line to get xmonad to work whith those keyboards.
Best regards,
Alain
(add sorry for the personal answer instead of the mailing-list) _______________________________________________ xmonad mailing list xmonad@haskell.org mailto:xmonad@haskell.org http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/xmonad