EDIT: Solved! Check this comment!
I use a keyboard with an american layout. I find it much better for coding and actually love this keyboard to pieces. However, I still need to write in portuguese.
The dead keys in Microsoft Windows worked perfectly for me but the Linux ones do not. Some characters are not available and are replaced by characters that don’t exist in the portuguese language.
In X11 I fixed this by using an .XCompose
file with the keybinds just like in Windows. Source here, it works perfectly.
In Wayland, the .XCompose
file works for pretty much all apps. Firefox is fine, kitty is fine, Vivaldi is fine. Unfortunately electron apps with the --ozone-platform-hint=wayland
ignores the .XCompose
file and I get the default keybinds. Since I own an nvidia card I really need these flags, otherwise the electron apps will aggressively flicker and/or eat letters while I’m typing.
I’ve searched far and wide, there are several open bugs in chromium, electron and wayland repositories. Everyone seems to be pointing fingers at each other for years and no workaround to make .XCompose
work seems to be available.
I’m wondering if there is an alternative way to customize the dead keys under Wayland. Thanks in advance.
I’m very happy to report that I found a solution to the problem:
keyd
. It’s amazing.GitHub project here
Credits for finding it
Instructions on the github project are crystal clear, but I’ll leave some instructions below for Arch Users
yay -S keyd
sudo systemctl enable keyd && sudo systemctl start keyd
Now you can configure the
/etc/keyd/default.conf
file to your hearts desire.keyd
is very feature rich, check the man page to see everything you can do. You can even add layers to your keyboard. Very sweet.My personal configuration so far (I will definitely expand it later when I bump into more problems)
[ids] * [main] ' = oneshotm(apostrophe, ') [apostrophe] a = a b = macro(space backspace apostrophe space b) c = macro(backspace G-,) d = macro(space backspace apostrophe space d) e = e f = macro(space backspace apostrophe space f) g = macro(backspace apostrophe space g) h = macro(space backspace apostrophe space h) i = i j = macro(space backspace apostrophe space j) k = macro(backspace apostrophe space k) l = macro(backspace apostrophe space l) m = macro(backspace apostrophe space m) n = macro(backspace apostrophe space n) o = o p = macro(space backspace apostrophe space p) q = macro(space backspace apostrophe space q) r = macro(backspace apostrophe space r) s = macro(backspace apostrophe space s) t = macro(backspace apostrophe space t) u = u v = macro(space backspace apostrophe space v) w = macro(backspace apostrophe space w) x = macro(space backspace apostrophe space x) y = macro(backspace apostrophe space y) z = macro(backspace apostrophe space z)
After editing
/etc/keyd/default.conf
make sure you runsudo keyd reload