LayoutConfigWidget LayoutConfigWidget 0 0 709 563 7 7 0 0 600 510 unnamed tabWidget 600 500 tabLayout Layout unnamed chkEnable &Enable keyboard layouts true grpLayouts <h1>Keyboard Layout</h1> Here you can choose your keyboard layout and model. The 'model' refers to the type of keyboard that is connected to your computer, while the keyboard layout defines "which key does what" and may be different for different countries. unnamed textLabel1_4 Available layouts: textLabel1_4_2 Active layouts: textLabel1_2 Keyboard &model: comboModel comboModel 7 0 0 0 Here you can choose a keyboard model. This setting is independent of your keyboard layout and refers to the "hardware" model, i.e. the way your keyboard is manufactured. Modern keyboards that come with your computer usually have two extra keys and are referred to as "104-key" models, which is probably what you want if you do not know what kind of keyboard you have. 1 false false Layout false true Keymap false true Variant false true 5 false false Label false false listLayoutsDst true If more than one layout is present in this list, the KDE panel will offer a docked flag. By clicking on this flag you can easily switch between layouts. The first layout will be default one. layout10 unnamed btnAdd Add >> btnRemove << Remove btnUp 0 0 0 0 btnDown 0 0 0 0 textLabel1_3 Command: editCmdLine false false Layout false true Keymap false true listLayoutsSrc 260 0 true This is the list of available keyboard layouts in your system. You can add layout to the active list by selecting it and pressing "Add" button. editCmdLine true This is the command which is executed when switching to the selected layout. It may help you if you want to debug layout switching, or if you want to switch layouts without the help of KDE. chkLatin false Include latin layout If after you switch to this layout some keyboard shortcuts based on latin keys do not work try to enable this option. textLabel1_6 Label: editDisplayName editDisplayName false 3 textLabel1 Layout variant: comboVariant comboVariant Here you can choose a variant of selected keyboard layout. Layout variants usually represent different key maps for the same language. For example, Ukrainian layout might have four variants: basic, winkeys (as in Windows), typewriter (as in typewriters) and phonetic (each Ukrainian letter is placed on a transliterated latin one). spacer3 Horizontal Expanding 210 20 spacer2 Horizontal Expanding 210 20 tab Switching Options unnamed spacer1 Vertical Expanding 20 40 optionsFrame StyledPanel Raised 0 unnamed grpSwitching Switching Policy true If you select "Application" or "Window" switching policy, changing the keyboard layout will only affect the current application or window. unnamed radioButton1 &Global true radioButton1_3 Application radioButton1_2 &Window chkShowFlag Show country flag true Shows country flag on background of layout name in tray icon grpBoxStickySwitching Sticky Switching unnamed chkEnableSticky Enable sticky switching If you have more than two layouts and turn this option on, switching with the keyboard shortcut or clicking on the kxkb indicator will only cycle through the last few layouts. You can specify the number of layouts to rotate below. You can still access all layouts by right-clicking on the kxkb indicator. textLabel1_5 false Number of layouts to rotate: spinBox1 spinStickyDepth false 10 2 chkShowSingle Show indicator for single layout tabOptions Xkb Options unnamed chkEnableOptions &Enable xkb options true groupBox3_2 Xkb Options Here you can set xkb extension options instead of, or in addition to, specifying them in the X11 configuration file. unnamed checkResetOld &Reset old options textLabel1_3_2 Command: editCmdLineOpt true Options false true listOptions chkEnable toggled(bool) grpLayouts setEnabled(bool) chkEnableOptions toggled(bool) groupBox3_2 setEnabled(bool) chkEnableSticky toggled(bool) spinStickyDepth setEnabled(bool) chkEnableSticky toggled(bool) textLabel1_5 setEnabled(bool) chkEnable toggled(bool) optionsFrame setEnabled(bool) kiconloader.h kdialogbase.h SmallIcon