Interestingly, using a modifier other than Shift (e.g. When specifying xev -event keyboard, the equal keypress (KeymapNotify event) results in the same output as when my mouse cursor crosses the xed window. The equal keypress registers as a KeymapNotify event rather than a KeyPress event. State 0x11, keycode 62 (keysym 0xffe2, Shift_R), same_screen YES, KeyRelease event, serial 28, synthetic NO, window 0x7800001, State 0x11, keycode 21 (keysym 0x2b, plus), same_screen YES, KeyPress event, serial 28, synthetic NO, window 0x7800001, State 0x10, keycode 62 (keysym 0xffe2, Shift_R), same_screen YES, Shift + equal key): KeyPress event, serial 28, synthetic NO, window 0x7800001, Using xev the following is revealed (I'm new to xev and still learning what this means):Įqual Key: KeymapNotify event, serial 28, synthetic NO, window 0x0,Įxample of All Other Keypresses I tried (i.e. If it was as simple as a reboot or stuck key, I would expect to have seen that resolve by now. I messed with this for days before finally deciding to post the issue. I have rebooted several times and I have checked multiple modifiers multiple times for stuck keys, but to no avail. This is exactly the issue I'm having, but this issue is in Windows. I have avoided rolling back the kernel to the previous version because I didn't want to start grasping at straws and getting myself into worse trouble, so I thought I'd post this first. There was a kernel update in the past few weeks. I only have one keyboard layout - English (US). It's only within Cinnamon that I have the issue. I can also use the equal key normally without a modifier key when in tty (Ctrl + Alt + F2). In addition, the Windows key and equal key types an equal sign in most text editors (LibreOffice Writer, Visual Studio Code, Xed text editor). In the terminal, the combination of Ctrl or Windows key and equal key results in the equal sign. The two exceptions with the physical keyboard I've found so far is with the GNOME Terminal. Shift + equal key still types the plus sign (+), but no key combination on the physical keyboard results in the equal sign (=) in web browsers and most other applications. The same symptoms extend to the onboard keyboard as well (not to be confused with the virtual keyboard which doesn't seem to have an equal key), so it's certainly not a hardware problem. I have to copy and paste it to write this post. I'm not exactly sure on the timing, but perhaps within the past week or so, the equal key no longer types the equal sign (=). If someone can find an existing post that resolves this issue, I will gladly mark this as a duplicate. These materials may not be reproduced without permission of NCSSM.I've seen several other posts similar to this issue, but I've not had luck implementing a solution. © North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics, All Rights Reserved. Note that Unicode begins with an ampersand and ends with a semi-colon. This will make the symbols display correctly in any browser. Unicode: You can use this code when keying in responses on free-response WebAssign items. Crop out the unnecessary region around the table. Then hold down Alt, Print Screen to copy the window to the clipboard. First, click on the window with the content that you want to capture. On a Windows machine, it's not as easy unless you happen to have a screen capture program. When you release the cursor, a png file of the region will be copied to your desktop. Then drag your cursor across the region you want to capture. To remove subscript or superscript formatting on a Mac, simply type Command = or Shift-Command = again. To remove subscript or superscript formatting in Windows, hold down Control First, select the symbol that youįor a subscript, hold down the Control (Command) key and type the = key.įor a superscript, hold down Shift-Control (Command) and type the = key. Here's how to get subscripts and superscripts in Word and Logger For Macs: CMD-c (copy), CMD-v (paste), and CMD-x (cut).For Windows: CTRL-c (copy), CTRL-v (paste), and CTRL-x (cut)
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