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authorBenno Schulenberg <bensberg@justemail.net>2014-01-11 13:09:52 +0100
committerSergey Udaltsov <sergey.udaltsov@gmail.com>2014-01-15 00:53:18 +0000
commitd9695269d4bdadae1a6e10b4003f2592eda899a2 (patch)
tree81dc97abb9d92ea270b19f43b6e4f69779959d74 /compat/README
parent5807c6cea78526ae2d5d6d82ec98ecad52369374 (diff)
compat/*: Tweaking and harmonizing some comments.
Signed-off-by: Benno Schulenberg <bensberg@justemail.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'compat/README')
-rw-r--r--compat/README14
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/compat/README b/compat/README
index 00d591e7..3c5747bb 100644
--- a/compat/README
+++ b/compat/README
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
The core protocol interpretation of keyboard modifiers does not include direct
support for multiple keyboard groups, so XKB reports the effective keyboard
-group to XKB-aware clients using some of reserved bits in the state field of
-some core protocol events. This modified state field would not be interpreted
+group to XKB-aware clients using some of the reserved bits in the state field
+of some core protocol events. This modified state field would not be interpreted
correctly by XKB-unaware clients, so XKB provides a group compatibility mapping
which remaps the keyboard group into a core modifier mask that has similar
effects, when possible.
@@ -15,8 +15,8 @@ XKB-unaware clients(*) work as well as possible:
- The compatibility grab state which is the nearest core-protocol equivalent
of the grab state.
-Compatibility state are essentially the corresponding XKB states, but with
-keyboard group possibly encoded as one or more modifiers.
+Compatibility states are essentially the corresponding XKB states, but with
+the keyboard group possibly encoded as one or more modifiers.
Modifiers that correspond to each keyboard group are described in this
group compatibility map.
@@ -25,9 +25,9 @@ group compatibility map.
----
(*) The implementation of XKB invisibly extends the X library to use the
keyboard extension if it is present. That means, clients that use library or
-toolkit routines to interpret keyboard events automatically use all of XKB
-features; clients that directly interpret the state field of core protocol
-events or the keymap direcly may be affected by some of the XKB differences.
+toolkit routines to interpret keyboard events automatically use all of XKB's
+features; clients that directly interpret the state field of core-protocol
+events or the keymap directly may be affected by some of the XKB differences.
Thus most clients can take all advantages without modification but it also
means that XKB state can be reported to clients that have not explicitly
requested the keyboard extension.