Index of Section 3 Manual Pages
| Interix / SUA | XkbKeyNumActions.3 | Interix / SUA |
XkbKeyNumActions(3) XKB FUNCTIONS XkbKeyNumActions(3)
NAME
XkbKeyNumActions - Computes the number of actions associ-
ated with the key corresponding to keycode
SYNOPSIS
int XkbKeyNumActions macro ( xkb, keycode )
XkbDescPtr xkb;
KeyCode keycode;
ARGUMENTS
- xkb Xkb description of interest
- keycode
keycode of interest
DESCRIPTION
A key action defines the effect key presses and releases
have on the internal state of the server. For example, the
expected key action associated with pressing the Shift key
is to set the Shift modifier. There is zero or one key
action associated with each keysym bound to each key.
Just as the entire list of key symbols for the keyboard
mapping is held in the syms field of the client map, the
entire list of key actions for the keyboard mapping is
held in the acts array of the server map. The total size
of acts is specified by size_acts, and the number of
entries is specified by num_acts.
The key_acts array, indexed by keycode, describes the
actions associated with a key. The key_acts array has
min_key_code unused entries at the start to allow direct
indexing using a keycode. If a key_acts entry is zero, it
means the key does not have any actions associated with
it. If an entry is not zero, the entry represents an index
into the acts field of the server map, much as the offset
field of a KeySymMapRec structure is an index into the
syms field of the client map.
The reason the acts field is a linear list of XkbActions
is to reduce the memory consumption associated with a
keymap. Because Xkb allows individual keys to have multi-
ple shift levels and a different number of groups per key,
a single two-dimensional array of KeySyms would poten-
tially be very large and sparse. Instead, Xkb provides a
small two-dimensional array of XkbActions for each key. To
store all of these individual arrays, Xkb concatenates
each array together in the acts field of the server map.
The key action structures consist only of fields of type
char or unsigned char. This is done to optimize data
transfer when the server sends bytes over the wire. If the
fields are anything but bytes, the server has to sift
through all of the actions and swap any nonbyte fields.
Because they consist of nothing but bytes, it can just
copy them out.
XkbKeyNumActions computes the number of actions associated
with the key corresponding to keycode. This should be the
same value as the result of XkbKeyNumSyms.
STRUCTURES
The KeySymMapRec structure is defined as follows:
#define XkbNumKbdGroups 4
#define XkbMaxKbdGroup (XkbNumKbdGroups-1)
typedef struct { /* map to keysyms for a single keycode */
unsigned char kt_index[XkbNumKbdGroups]; /* key type index for each group */
unsigned char group_info; /* # of groups and out of range group handling */
unsigned char width; /* max # of shift levels for key */
unsigned short offset; /* index to keysym table in syms array */
} XkbSymMapRec, *XkbSymMapPtr;
SEE ALSO
XkbKeyNumSyms(3)
X Version 11 libX11 1.1.5 XkbKeyNumActions(3)