mirror of
https://git.lyx.org/repos/lyx.git
synced 2024-11-27 11:52:25 +00:00
a60b5c0b72
git-svn-id: svn://svn.lyx.org/lyx/lyx-devel/trunk@7905 a592a061-630c-0410-9148-cb99ea01b6c8
53 lines
1.8 KiB
Plaintext
53 lines
1.8 KiB
Plaintext
#
|
|
# Keyboard mapping for Serbo-Croatian latin keyboard (ISO8859-2 encoding)
|
|
# Based on the standard JUS.I.K1.002
|
|
#
|
|
# (c)2001 by Zvezdan Petkovic <z.petkovic@computer.org>
|
|
#
|
|
|
|
\kmap @ \" # The characters above numbers are almost all remapped
|
|
\kmap ^ &
|
|
\kmap & /
|
|
\kmap * (
|
|
\kmap ( )
|
|
\kmap ) =
|
|
\kmap - '
|
|
\kmap _ ?
|
|
\kmap = +
|
|
\kmap + *
|
|
\kmap ` <
|
|
\kmap ~ >
|
|
\kmap y z # y and z are switched
|
|
\kmap Y Z
|
|
\kmap [ "\\v{s}" # s caron (pronunced sh)
|
|
\kmap { "\\v{S}"
|
|
\kmap ] "\\dh{}" # d stroke (pronunced dj, with j as in German, not as
|
|
\kmap } "\\DH{}" # in English)
|
|
# Well, this one is a no win situation. If I define it as \dj{} (as I
|
|
# should), then LyX puts that string in the text being unable to find
|
|
# the corresponding character or draw an accent over a character.
|
|
# Unfortunately, LyX doesn't put it in TeX mode automatically and it
|
|
# must be done by hand -- exactly what we want to avoid. Hence, I choose
|
|
# to use \dh{} which is shown as ð in iso8859-1 encoding and as d stroke
|
|
# (correct character) in iso8859-2 encoding. Since ð looks as a
|
|
# handwritten d stroke character (and capital Ð is exactly the same),
|
|
# screen approximation is satisfying.
|
|
# The only problem is if somebody runs this through LaTeX without using
|
|
# \usepackage[latin2]{inputenc}. Then, they will get ð even in the
|
|
# printed version. It is still readable, but the solution is to replace
|
|
# all ð's with \dj{}. However, nobody should be using Serbo-Croatian
|
|
# without latin2 option. In LyX it is enough to choose the language of
|
|
# a document as serbocroatian or croatian.
|
|
\kmap \\ "\\v{z}" # z caron (pronounced zh)
|
|
\kmap | "\\v{Z}"
|
|
\kmap ; "\\v{c}" # c caron (pronunced tch)
|
|
\kmap : "\\v{C}"
|
|
\kmap ' "\\'{c}" # c accute (pronunced as very soft ch)
|
|
\kmap \" "\\'{C}"
|
|
\kmap z y
|
|
\kmap Z Y
|
|
\kmap < ;
|
|
\kmap > :
|
|
\kmap / -
|
|
\kmap ? _
|