Sooo, because I go nuts everytime I need to:'nHow do I make the € symbol magically appear when using Linux Mint?
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Sooo, because I go nuts everytime I need to:
How do I make the € symbol magically appear when using Linux Mint? It's frustrating that the combination Ctrl + Alt + e doesn't seem to be a default.
I'd prefer not having to use the terminal to achieve this, I'm not that much of a nerd. 😅
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undefined Oblomov ha condiviso questa discussione
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Sooo, because I go nuts everytime I need to:
How do I make the € symbol magically appear when using Linux Mint? It's frustrating that the combination Ctrl + Alt + e doesn't seem to be a default.
I'd prefer not having to use the terminal to achieve this, I'm not that much of a nerd. 😅
@floreana depends on the keyboard layout you have configured. Try AltGr+5 (Ctrl+Alt+5) too.
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Sooo, because I go nuts everytime I need to:
How do I make the € symbol magically appear when using Linux Mint? It's frustrating that the combination Ctrl + Alt + e doesn't seem to be a default.
I'd prefer not having to use the terminal to achieve this, I'm not that much of a nerd. 😅
@floreana post-edit comment: see, that's your problem, you should be using the US International layout with dead keys ;-)
(I joke, you should use whatever you feel most comfortable with, but US Intl has all accent and diacritics available via composition and dead keys. One layout to rule them all.)
If you have a Compose key enabled, compose e = should give you the € symbol. Otherwise, you'll need to enable the eurosign:e option for the keyboard layout (not sure how it's done via GUI)