Browsing Hungarian translation

91100 of 192 results
91.
A modifier key for the keycode. This key is sent with the main key to modify its behavior. Examples: shift, alt, ctrl.
TRANSLATORS: this describes to the user what a modifier key is. The modifier
* key is a key such as shift, alt, ctrl. The keycode is a keyboard or button
* name. Example: KEY_PAGEUP for a "Page Up" key. The main key refers to the
* keycode (the key that is sent with a modifier key. For example, in
* Ctrl+Alt+B the main key would be "B".
(no translation yet)
Located in text.h:192
92.
Select the type of event sent by btnx when pressing this button. You can either send a key combination or execute a command.
TRANSLATORS: do not translate btnx. It is the name of a program.
(no translation yet)
Located in text.h:196
93.
Error: button detection start error
TRANSLATORS: button refers to a mouse button.
(no translation yet)
Located in text.h:201
94.
Button detection startup failed. Try again. If the problem persists, file a bug report.
TRANSLATORS: button refers to a mouse button.
(no translation yet)
Located in text.h:204
95.
Press a single button on your mouse until the detection progress bar is full.

Press Cancel to discard all changes.
There are line breaks here. Each one represents a line break. Start a new line in the equivalent position in the translation.
(no translation yet)
Located in text.h:208
96.
A button has been detected. Give it a name that you will recognize in the future.
Then press Add to add it to the configuration.
TRANSLATORS: button refers to a mouse button. "Add" is the label of a button.
* The "Add" label is automatically translated by the system and your
* translation should be the same. If you don't know what name your system
* uses for the "Add" button, try running some programs that use it.
There are line breaks here. Each one represents a line break. Start a new line in the equivalent position in the translation.
(no translation yet)
Located in text.h:216
97.
Button detection problem
(no translation yet)
Located in text.h:220
98.
A problem has occurred during button detection.
Multiple mouse buttons have been detected. There are three possible causes:

1. You pressed different buttons too many times. Press Cancel and try again.
2. You pressed a previously detected button too many times. Press Cancel and try again
3. Your mouse button sends more than one event when pressing that button. btnx cannot handle more than one event during a button press. You must choose one rawcode below to associate with that button.
(Hint: choose the one with the most clicks. If there are multiple rawcodes with the same number of clicks, try one and see if it works. If it doesn't, try another one next time.
TRANSLATORS: do not translate btnx. It is the name of a program. Cancel
* is the name of a button. Make sure to translate it to the same name that
* your system uses on all "Cancel" buttons. Rawcode is used elsewhere in the
* program. Make sure to use the same translation here.
* The user doesn't necessarily need to understand what "rawcode"
* means. It is a 32-bit integer value in hexadecimal form, intercepted from an
* input stream. It is called "raw" because it has not been modified to make
* it more readable or understandable.
There are line breaks here. Each one represents a line break. Start a new line in the equivalent position in the translation.
(no translation yet)
Located in text.h:230
99.
Error: no keycode file
TRANSLATORS: keycode is used elsewhere in the program. Use the same
* translation here. The keycode is a keyboard or button
* name. Example: KEY_PAGEUP for a "Page Up" key.
(no translation yet)
Located in text.h:246
100.
btnx-config needs the file /etc/btnx/events to run. Make sure you have installed btnx first, and that the file exists.
TRANSLATORS: Do not translate btnx-config
* or btnx, they are the names of programs.
(no translation yet)
Located in text.h:250
91100 of 192 results

No translation group has been assigned.

You are not logged in. Please log in to work on translations.

Contributors to this translation: Pummer Péter.