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I'm new to the X.org programming. I want to build up a small application which reacts on the X keyboard layout switch. I've searched, but didn't find which event is fired when the kb layout is switched. Please, point me to the correct event. Thanks

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  • What are you doing to switch the keyboard layout? Are you using a GUI client? Or editing a config file? When does the change take effect? These are clues that may help us learn where to look. Mar 19, 2013 at 22:26
  • Switching between language layout (en, cs, ...). A GUI client which listens to kb switch (e.g. I have setup both Shifts to switch keyboard layout and this switch generates an event which I want to catch and do some operation). Should be c/c++ code.
    – Pat
    Mar 20, 2013 at 8:45
  • Can you post some code?
    – JoRouss
    Apr 12, 2013 at 17:46
  • Fire up xev and switch keyboard layouts.
    – jthill
    Apr 12, 2013 at 23:53
  • @jthill, using xev won't do. Yes, switching layout via keyboard produces KeyPress and KeyRelease events with keysym 0xfe08 - ISO_Next_Group. However, layout can also be switched though some widget, with a mouse, and then we miss it.
    – shakurov
    Apr 13, 2013 at 10:25

1 Answer 1

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+200

There's the XkbStateNotify event type, which is part of the X Keyboard Extension. You can grab layout language from it like this:

void x11Events(XEvent* evt)
{
    if(evt->type == xkbEventType) {
        XkbEvent* xkbevt = (XkbEvent*)evt;
        if (xkbevt->any.xkb_type == XkbStateNotify) {
            int lang = xkbevt->state.group;
            // Some code using lang here.
        }
    }
}

To get xkbEventType, call the XkbQueryExtension() function (declared in XKBlib.h).

However, XkbStateNotify is fired not only on layout change. This is from specification referenced above:

The changes reported include changes to any aspect of the keyboard state: when a modifier is set or unset, when the current group changes, or when a pointer button is pressed or released.

Because of this, you'll have to save the value of lang somewhere, and then, when new event arrives, compare new value of lang to the one previously saved.

NB. There's also the XkbMapNotifyEvent event, which notifies not about switching layout per se, but about changing keyboard mapping. You might want to look into that one, too.

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  • Of note to programmers might be a hint how to obtain this event using a modern toolkit such as GTK. Apr 13, 2013 at 10:26
  • 1
    In GTK, there's usually no need for processing raw XEvents (not for detecting layout change, at least), since there're gdk events, which can be used to get current keyboard group, too. Moreover, meddling in X event processing in gtk apps can undermine the toolkit, since it has its own event processing loop. I don't no much about Qt, but I suspect things are similar there.
    – shakurov
    Apr 13, 2013 at 17:25
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    The only gdk event I see that can be used to detect keyboard group change is GdkEventKey. Even assuming we'll manage to listen to the root window events (since all event handling in gdk/gtk is window/widget-based, and we want all the events, not just the ones for specific window), we'll still only detect layout changes done via keyboard, and miss those done by other means. So, I don't see how it can be done. Not even sure it's possible. I do know how to get to raw XEvents from a GTK app, though. I could write it up in my answer, but it feels like too specific a digression.
    – shakurov
    Apr 13, 2013 at 20:15
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    GDK actually supports a hook to snoop at events regardless of which widget they belong to: gdk_event_handler_set. This is normally taken by GTK, but as long as one remembers to call gtk_main_do_event, one can react to the event as necessary. It would be interesting to see how the various Gnome keyboard layout indicators are implemented. Apr 13, 2013 at 20:22
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    Hm, both libgnomekbd (see gkbd-configuration.c:224) and xfce4-xkb-plugin (see panel-plugin/xkb-config.c:112) listen to the "X-state-changed" glib event, which is emitted by libxklavier (see xklavier.c:498). The xklavier library listens to X events (in the xkl_xkb_process_x_event() function). So, using libxklavier (and glib) is another possibility to detect layout change (links above provide some examples).
    – shakurov
    Apr 13, 2013 at 21:55

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