mapped keys, key maps, and modifiers confusion
I've been looking through here to see if I can find the same issue, and although some are close, I can't find a good enough match that I haven't tried.
Playing WoW on 1 computer, 5 a/c's, 1bnet. Using ISboxer 41, config: http://privatepaste.com/fa1b2baf1e
I (most likely foolishly) downloaded the Pro CLS config and tried setting it up, along with some click heal bars as described in some excellent threads.
I'm using virtual keymaps for my chars, driving with the pally who has the 87-90 Retri key map virtually mapped.
When I press "1" in-game, my pally window just opened lots of windows (world map, Achievements, etc) rather than firing the macros as defined in the Paladin macro set referenced by the key map. My healer (who has another keymap mapped) was fine and fired off some totems. Firstly, I brought up the console and enbaled debugging for the button on my main, fired the button and saw lots of buttons returned (there's a few macros fired in the mashed button). They all had funny numbers (I assume hex or something for CTRL, ALT, SHIFT, etc) + a standard Alpha (M, Y, etc). At this point my understanding was that ISBoxer is sending the key combination of the macro as stored in ISBoxer (i.e CTRL-SHIFT-ALT-M) but WoW was ignoring the modifiers and just executing "M". Is that correct? I cant figure out why WoW won't just cast the spell. Do I need to map every macro in a macro set to a real macro in game or something?
I altered the Key Combo in ISB to use NumberPad, but realised in WoW I had NumPad0 mapped as an alt to Jump, so all my guy did was jump. I unmapped it in WoW, and then he didn't jump, but I assume my pally was executing nowt then in WoW?
I'm sure I've been reading too much without enough understanding of the real mechanics here, and I'm missing something daft, so any ideas are greatly appreciated. One other note...My click heal bars work like a charm and the standard keys like ALT-F work for follow, and Jamba and ISB are enabled in WoW.
Many thanks in advance,
Eisenhorn.