Summary: | Disable non us keyboard layouts in lock screen and in login screen | ||
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Product: | [Unmaintained] kxkb | Reporter: | Andrew Shark <ashark> |
Component: | general | Assignee: | Unassigned bugs mailing-list <unassigned-bugs> |
Status: | RESOLVED INTENTIONAL | ||
Severity: | normal | CC: | nate |
Priority: | NOR | ||
Version: | unspecified | ||
Target Milestone: | --- | ||
Platform: | Other | ||
OS: | Linux | ||
Latest Commit: | Version Fixed In: | ||
Sentry Crash Report: |
Description
Andrew Shark
2018-12-05 04:30:44 UTC
Not possible, or else you could find yourself unable to type your password if it required the use of characters not available with the en_us layout. What about making it as an option? I still am using password with only Latin characters and digits, and still suffer from this inconvenience. But what's the inconvenience? You can just ignore the keyboard layout chooser. It sits there in a corner, not doing anything unless you click on it. So don't click on it. :) The inconvenience is not a switcher icon itself. Inconvenience is about layout could be at wrong state. I want it to always be us. If that is the case, I just type a password, then press enter, and all is ok. But layout may be set to non-us (in my case ru layout). So I type a password, press enter, login fails, then I realise that I am on wrong layout. So I need to switch it to us, and enter password again. In other words, inconvenience is that I always need to keep an eye on switcher state before typing password, or make another try when it was ru layout. And layout is dependent on what state it was set before you locked your screen. If that is not going to be fixed (as bug was marked intentional), then could you please give a reference how I can try to do it via script? I mean, as there are two layouts, script should always set layout to us. Implementing your proposal would give users a way to accidentally lock themselves out of their systems, which is a no-go. We don't add dangerous off-by-default options solely to satisfy technical experts. You're welcome to edit the QML files locally for the lock and login screens. They're not too hard to understand. |