Hello,
I cannot get A and Z (accelerate/deaccelerate) to work, they do nothing, no matter what mode, or no mode at all (ESC).
Can anyone reproduce this problem or give me a solution?
Thanks.
A/Z keys not working in 1.3.1
They work fine for me!
You are using lower case "a" and "z", I hope.
Uppercase "A" and "Z" don't do anything in Celestia.
You'll have to specify which operating system you are running, what your system's language Input Locale (keyboard code) is, what keyboard you're using, and if you've modified the key mapping.
My system:
256MB 500MHz P3, WinXP Pro SP1
Locale: us
Keyboard: "PC/AT Enhanced PS/2 Keyboard (101/102 key)"
(actually a DEC "VMS layout" LK46W-A2)
You are using lower case "a" and "z", I hope.
Uppercase "A" and "Z" don't do anything in Celestia.
You'll have to specify which operating system you are running, what your system's language Input Locale (keyboard code) is, what keyboard you're using, and if you've modified the key mapping.
My system:
256MB 500MHz P3, WinXP Pro SP1
Locale: us
Keyboard: "PC/AT Enhanced PS/2 Keyboard (101/102 key)"
(actually a DEC "VMS layout" LK46W-A2)
Selden
Hello,
I have tried both SHIFT/A-Z and without SHIFT, both don't work. I've even tried alt
I am running Debian Woody (Linux 2.4.18) on an x86, I haven't set up any localisation stuff (i never do), i have a plain US keyboard map. Keyboard is a Silicon Graphics PS/2 keyboard. I doubt this makes any difference, as A and Z are about the simplest keys one can imagine.
I haven't modified anything concerning keyboard configuration.
Locale: C
Thanks for any help you could provide.
I have tried both SHIFT/A-Z and without SHIFT, both don't work. I've even tried alt
I am running Debian Woody (Linux 2.4.18) on an x86, I haven't set up any localisation stuff (i never do), i have a plain US keyboard map. Keyboard is a Silicon Graphics PS/2 keyboard. I doubt this makes any difference, as A and Z are about the simplest keys one can imagine.
I haven't modified anything concerning keyboard configuration.
Locale: C
Thanks for any help you could provide.