Ubuntu 18.04 no on-screen keyboard?
In 16.04 the Onboard on-screen keyboard was available by default, but it looks like it was dropped (because of Gnome integration problems?).
Question 1: Can anyone confirm was onboard
replaced by caribou
?
Having done a fresh install of 18.04, looking in Synaptic it seems I have neither onboard
nor caribou
installed and switching on Screen Keyboard in Universal Access does nothing.
Question 2: Is this normal?
Question 3: Given I only use it occasionally when using unfamiliar keyboards (e.g. Greek), which will be less problematic?
I’m also using Budgie desktop, though the base install is the vanilla 18.04 with Gnome.
18.04 onboard onscreen-keyboard
add a comment |
In 16.04 the Onboard on-screen keyboard was available by default, but it looks like it was dropped (because of Gnome integration problems?).
Question 1: Can anyone confirm was onboard
replaced by caribou
?
Having done a fresh install of 18.04, looking in Synaptic it seems I have neither onboard
nor caribou
installed and switching on Screen Keyboard in Universal Access does nothing.
Question 2: Is this normal?
Question 3: Given I only use it occasionally when using unfamiliar keyboards (e.g. Greek), which will be less problematic?
I’m also using Budgie desktop, though the base install is the vanilla 18.04 with Gnome.
18.04 onboard onscreen-keyboard
add a comment |
In 16.04 the Onboard on-screen keyboard was available by default, but it looks like it was dropped (because of Gnome integration problems?).
Question 1: Can anyone confirm was onboard
replaced by caribou
?
Having done a fresh install of 18.04, looking in Synaptic it seems I have neither onboard
nor caribou
installed and switching on Screen Keyboard in Universal Access does nothing.
Question 2: Is this normal?
Question 3: Given I only use it occasionally when using unfamiliar keyboards (e.g. Greek), which will be less problematic?
I’m also using Budgie desktop, though the base install is the vanilla 18.04 with Gnome.
18.04 onboard onscreen-keyboard
In 16.04 the Onboard on-screen keyboard was available by default, but it looks like it was dropped (because of Gnome integration problems?).
Question 1: Can anyone confirm was onboard
replaced by caribou
?
Having done a fresh install of 18.04, looking in Synaptic it seems I have neither onboard
nor caribou
installed and switching on Screen Keyboard in Universal Access does nothing.
Question 2: Is this normal?
Question 3: Given I only use it occasionally when using unfamiliar keyboards (e.g. Greek), which will be less problematic?
I’m also using Budgie desktop, though the base install is the vanilla 18.04 with Gnome.
18.04 onboard onscreen-keyboard
18.04 onboard onscreen-keyboard
asked Jul 19 '18 at 8:29
MoilleadóirMoilleadóir
172112
172112
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Gnome 2.28 in Ubuntu 18.04 has a new on-screen keyboard:
https://help.gnome.org/misc/release-notes/3.28/
The release notes say that "the new keyboard automatically activates when a text area is selected", but for me (on Cosmic, in Wayland session) it only triggers automatically when I touch the search boxes in the Gnome Activities and Application menu, nowhere else.
In these two places where it works it triggers even if it is not enabled in the Accessibility settings. It would be perfect if it worked for "a text area" as the release notes say (which I interpreted as "every").
You can install "onboard" as a workaround, though I don't know about Budgie. (Edit: I tried onboard as a workaround on Cosmic 18.10 before I knew what was going on (see further edits below) and it was a complete unusable mess. I didn't try caribou)
Edit: To attempt an answer to your Question 3, IF the new onscreen keyboard works for you, either because you can swipe up from the bottom of the screen, which activates the keyboard only if you use Gnome in a Wayland session, or you somehow you can manually activate it in an X session (which seems tricky, see edit below), it is great. I have not tried alternative key maps, but the new onscreen keyboard seems fully integrated into the Gnome keyboard settings, and I suppose you can choose alternative keyboards like Greek as if you attached an external hardware keyboard.
Edit:
Please see my attempt at an explanation in my new comment in an older Launchpad bug report (though some is not yet cleared up fully and I may have made mistakes due to confusion):
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gnome-shell/+bug/1760399/comments/10
The report also has links to additional new bug reports
1
Yep, installing and running "onboard" seems to be what everybody is really expectingsudo apt install onboard
will install both - onboard itself and its setting where you can adjust the stickiness and other stuff...
– jave.web
Jan 28 at 16:53
There is much activity on the Ubuntu bug report (link in my prev. answer) and a fix seems on its way
– Knuckles
Jan 29 at 18:43
add a comment |
Like @jave.web said in his comment under the answer by @Knuckles, onboard worked for me.
- Install it:
sudo apt install onboard
- Once you've installed onboard, press Super (Windows key) and then type "onboard" to see both the "onboard" and "onboard settings" options. Use the first to bring up the program and the latter to modify its settings.
- Here's a screenshot. It seems to work ok:
Also note the little icon in the top right of the screen you get to it now too:
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
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2 Answers
2
active
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Gnome 2.28 in Ubuntu 18.04 has a new on-screen keyboard:
https://help.gnome.org/misc/release-notes/3.28/
The release notes say that "the new keyboard automatically activates when a text area is selected", but for me (on Cosmic, in Wayland session) it only triggers automatically when I touch the search boxes in the Gnome Activities and Application menu, nowhere else.
In these two places where it works it triggers even if it is not enabled in the Accessibility settings. It would be perfect if it worked for "a text area" as the release notes say (which I interpreted as "every").
You can install "onboard" as a workaround, though I don't know about Budgie. (Edit: I tried onboard as a workaround on Cosmic 18.10 before I knew what was going on (see further edits below) and it was a complete unusable mess. I didn't try caribou)
Edit: To attempt an answer to your Question 3, IF the new onscreen keyboard works for you, either because you can swipe up from the bottom of the screen, which activates the keyboard only if you use Gnome in a Wayland session, or you somehow you can manually activate it in an X session (which seems tricky, see edit below), it is great. I have not tried alternative key maps, but the new onscreen keyboard seems fully integrated into the Gnome keyboard settings, and I suppose you can choose alternative keyboards like Greek as if you attached an external hardware keyboard.
Edit:
Please see my attempt at an explanation in my new comment in an older Launchpad bug report (though some is not yet cleared up fully and I may have made mistakes due to confusion):
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gnome-shell/+bug/1760399/comments/10
The report also has links to additional new bug reports
1
Yep, installing and running "onboard" seems to be what everybody is really expectingsudo apt install onboard
will install both - onboard itself and its setting where you can adjust the stickiness and other stuff...
– jave.web
Jan 28 at 16:53
There is much activity on the Ubuntu bug report (link in my prev. answer) and a fix seems on its way
– Knuckles
Jan 29 at 18:43
add a comment |
Gnome 2.28 in Ubuntu 18.04 has a new on-screen keyboard:
https://help.gnome.org/misc/release-notes/3.28/
The release notes say that "the new keyboard automatically activates when a text area is selected", but for me (on Cosmic, in Wayland session) it only triggers automatically when I touch the search boxes in the Gnome Activities and Application menu, nowhere else.
In these two places where it works it triggers even if it is not enabled in the Accessibility settings. It would be perfect if it worked for "a text area" as the release notes say (which I interpreted as "every").
You can install "onboard" as a workaround, though I don't know about Budgie. (Edit: I tried onboard as a workaround on Cosmic 18.10 before I knew what was going on (see further edits below) and it was a complete unusable mess. I didn't try caribou)
Edit: To attempt an answer to your Question 3, IF the new onscreen keyboard works for you, either because you can swipe up from the bottom of the screen, which activates the keyboard only if you use Gnome in a Wayland session, or you somehow you can manually activate it in an X session (which seems tricky, see edit below), it is great. I have not tried alternative key maps, but the new onscreen keyboard seems fully integrated into the Gnome keyboard settings, and I suppose you can choose alternative keyboards like Greek as if you attached an external hardware keyboard.
Edit:
Please see my attempt at an explanation in my new comment in an older Launchpad bug report (though some is not yet cleared up fully and I may have made mistakes due to confusion):
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gnome-shell/+bug/1760399/comments/10
The report also has links to additional new bug reports
1
Yep, installing and running "onboard" seems to be what everybody is really expectingsudo apt install onboard
will install both - onboard itself and its setting where you can adjust the stickiness and other stuff...
– jave.web
Jan 28 at 16:53
There is much activity on the Ubuntu bug report (link in my prev. answer) and a fix seems on its way
– Knuckles
Jan 29 at 18:43
add a comment |
Gnome 2.28 in Ubuntu 18.04 has a new on-screen keyboard:
https://help.gnome.org/misc/release-notes/3.28/
The release notes say that "the new keyboard automatically activates when a text area is selected", but for me (on Cosmic, in Wayland session) it only triggers automatically when I touch the search boxes in the Gnome Activities and Application menu, nowhere else.
In these two places where it works it triggers even if it is not enabled in the Accessibility settings. It would be perfect if it worked for "a text area" as the release notes say (which I interpreted as "every").
You can install "onboard" as a workaround, though I don't know about Budgie. (Edit: I tried onboard as a workaround on Cosmic 18.10 before I knew what was going on (see further edits below) and it was a complete unusable mess. I didn't try caribou)
Edit: To attempt an answer to your Question 3, IF the new onscreen keyboard works for you, either because you can swipe up from the bottom of the screen, which activates the keyboard only if you use Gnome in a Wayland session, or you somehow you can manually activate it in an X session (which seems tricky, see edit below), it is great. I have not tried alternative key maps, but the new onscreen keyboard seems fully integrated into the Gnome keyboard settings, and I suppose you can choose alternative keyboards like Greek as if you attached an external hardware keyboard.
Edit:
Please see my attempt at an explanation in my new comment in an older Launchpad bug report (though some is not yet cleared up fully and I may have made mistakes due to confusion):
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gnome-shell/+bug/1760399/comments/10
The report also has links to additional new bug reports
Gnome 2.28 in Ubuntu 18.04 has a new on-screen keyboard:
https://help.gnome.org/misc/release-notes/3.28/
The release notes say that "the new keyboard automatically activates when a text area is selected", but for me (on Cosmic, in Wayland session) it only triggers automatically when I touch the search boxes in the Gnome Activities and Application menu, nowhere else.
In these two places where it works it triggers even if it is not enabled in the Accessibility settings. It would be perfect if it worked for "a text area" as the release notes say (which I interpreted as "every").
You can install "onboard" as a workaround, though I don't know about Budgie. (Edit: I tried onboard as a workaround on Cosmic 18.10 before I knew what was going on (see further edits below) and it was a complete unusable mess. I didn't try caribou)
Edit: To attempt an answer to your Question 3, IF the new onscreen keyboard works for you, either because you can swipe up from the bottom of the screen, which activates the keyboard only if you use Gnome in a Wayland session, or you somehow you can manually activate it in an X session (which seems tricky, see edit below), it is great. I have not tried alternative key maps, but the new onscreen keyboard seems fully integrated into the Gnome keyboard settings, and I suppose you can choose alternative keyboards like Greek as if you attached an external hardware keyboard.
Edit:
Please see my attempt at an explanation in my new comment in an older Launchpad bug report (though some is not yet cleared up fully and I may have made mistakes due to confusion):
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gnome-shell/+bug/1760399/comments/10
The report also has links to additional new bug reports
edited Sep 18 '18 at 22:02
answered Sep 8 '18 at 20:18
KnucklesKnuckles
965
965
1
Yep, installing and running "onboard" seems to be what everybody is really expectingsudo apt install onboard
will install both - onboard itself and its setting where you can adjust the stickiness and other stuff...
– jave.web
Jan 28 at 16:53
There is much activity on the Ubuntu bug report (link in my prev. answer) and a fix seems on its way
– Knuckles
Jan 29 at 18:43
add a comment |
1
Yep, installing and running "onboard" seems to be what everybody is really expectingsudo apt install onboard
will install both - onboard itself and its setting where you can adjust the stickiness and other stuff...
– jave.web
Jan 28 at 16:53
There is much activity on the Ubuntu bug report (link in my prev. answer) and a fix seems on its way
– Knuckles
Jan 29 at 18:43
1
1
Yep, installing and running "onboard" seems to be what everybody is really expecting
sudo apt install onboard
will install both - onboard itself and its setting where you can adjust the stickiness and other stuff...– jave.web
Jan 28 at 16:53
Yep, installing and running "onboard" seems to be what everybody is really expecting
sudo apt install onboard
will install both - onboard itself and its setting where you can adjust the stickiness and other stuff...– jave.web
Jan 28 at 16:53
There is much activity on the Ubuntu bug report (link in my prev. answer) and a fix seems on its way
– Knuckles
Jan 29 at 18:43
There is much activity on the Ubuntu bug report (link in my prev. answer) and a fix seems on its way
– Knuckles
Jan 29 at 18:43
add a comment |
Like @jave.web said in his comment under the answer by @Knuckles, onboard worked for me.
- Install it:
sudo apt install onboard
- Once you've installed onboard, press Super (Windows key) and then type "onboard" to see both the "onboard" and "onboard settings" options. Use the first to bring up the program and the latter to modify its settings.
- Here's a screenshot. It seems to work ok:
Also note the little icon in the top right of the screen you get to it now too:
add a comment |
Like @jave.web said in his comment under the answer by @Knuckles, onboard worked for me.
- Install it:
sudo apt install onboard
- Once you've installed onboard, press Super (Windows key) and then type "onboard" to see both the "onboard" and "onboard settings" options. Use the first to bring up the program and the latter to modify its settings.
- Here's a screenshot. It seems to work ok:
Also note the little icon in the top right of the screen you get to it now too:
add a comment |
Like @jave.web said in his comment under the answer by @Knuckles, onboard worked for me.
- Install it:
sudo apt install onboard
- Once you've installed onboard, press Super (Windows key) and then type "onboard" to see both the "onboard" and "onboard settings" options. Use the first to bring up the program and the latter to modify its settings.
- Here's a screenshot. It seems to work ok:
Also note the little icon in the top right of the screen you get to it now too:
Like @jave.web said in his comment under the answer by @Knuckles, onboard worked for me.
- Install it:
sudo apt install onboard
- Once you've installed onboard, press Super (Windows key) and then type "onboard" to see both the "onboard" and "onboard settings" options. Use the first to bring up the program and the latter to modify its settings.
- Here's a screenshot. It seems to work ok:
Also note the little icon in the top right of the screen you get to it now too:
answered Feb 19 at 7:21
Gabriel StaplesGabriel Staples
7811924
7811924
add a comment |
add a comment |
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