[openFATE 307310] Good CJK / East Asian input support (esp. KDE)
Feature added by: Markus K (KAMiKAZOW) Feature #307310, revision 1 Title: Good CJK / East Asian input support (esp. KDE) openSUSE-11.2: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Important Requested by: Markus K (kamikazow) Description: Setting up CJK support for typing kanji has always been a bitch for me and I always failed -- especially under KDE 4, even though I consider myself an experienced computer user. Wang Hoi developed an applet that should make it all easier. It's currently in KDE-Review. He wrote about it: http://qiacat.blogspot.com/2009/03/as-my-first-post-first-say-hello-to.html http://mail.kde.org/pipermail/plasma-devel/2009-May/005420.html -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/307310
Feature changed by: Jan Engelhardt (jengelh) Feature #307310, revision 2 Title: Good CJK / East Asian input support (esp. KDE) openSUSE-11.2: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Important Requested by: Markus K (kamikazow) Description: Setting up CJK support for typing kanji has always been a bitch for me and I always failed -- especially under KDE 4, even though I consider myself an experienced computer user. Wang Hoi developed an applet that should make it all easier. It's currently in KDE-Review. He wrote about it: http://qiacat.blogspot.com/2009/03/as-my-first-post-first-say-hello-to.html http://mail.kde.org/pipermail/plasma-devel/2009-May/005420.html + Discussion: + #1: Jan Engelhardt (jengelh) (2009-08-12 17:06:12) + There is not much that can fail, actually. I think this is the simple + procedure I used. + 1. zypper in scim-anthy (package name depends on language you want) + 2. perl -i -pe 's/^INPUT_METHOD=.*/INPUT_METHOD="scim"/' + /etc/sysconfig/input + 3. (log in again) + 4. Shift-Space (IIRC; I changed my configuration to Ctrl-Alt-Space + because Shift-Space is too easy to trigger in daily life). + 5. Type SUSEは大好きだよ and profit. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/307310
Feature changed by: Markus K (KAMiKAZOW) Feature #307310, revision 3 Title: Good CJK / East Asian input support (esp. KDE) openSUSE-11.2: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Important + openSUSE-11.3: Unconfirmed + Priority + Requester: Mandatory Requested by: Markus K (kamikazow) Description: Setting up CJK support for typing kanji has always been a bitch for me and I always failed -- especially under KDE 4, even though I consider myself an experienced computer user. Wang Hoi developed an applet that should make it all easier. It's currently in KDE-Review. He wrote about it: http://qiacat.blogspot.com/2009/03/as-my-first-post-first-say-hello-to.html http://mail.kde.org/pipermail/plasma-devel/2009-May/005420.html Discussion: #1: Jan Engelhardt (jengelh) (2009-08-12 17:06:12) There is not much that can fail, actually. I think this is the simple procedure I used. 1. zypper in scim-anthy (package name depends on language you want) 2. perl -i -pe 's/^INPUT_METHOD=.*/INPUT_METHOD="scim"/' /etc/sysconfig/input 3. (log in again) 4. Shift-Space (IIRC; I changed my configuration to Ctrl-Alt-Space because Shift-Space is too easy to trigger in daily life). 5. Type SUSEは大好きだよ and profit. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/307310
Feature changed by: Markus K (KAMiKAZOW) Feature #307310, revision 5 Title: Good CJK / East Asian input support (esp. KDE) openSUSE-11.2: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Important openSUSE-11.3: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Mandatory Requested by: Markus K (kamikazow) Description: Setting up CJK support for typing kanji has always been a bitch for me and I always failed -- especially under KDE 4, even though I consider myself an experienced computer user. Wang Hoi developed an applet that should make it all easier. It's currently in KDE-Review. He wrote about it: http://qiacat.blogspot.com/2009/03/as-my-first-post-first-say-hello-to.html http://mail.kde.org/pipermail/plasma-devel/2009-May/005420.html Discussion: #1: Jan Engelhardt (jengelh) (2009-08-12 17:06:12) There is not much that can fail, actually. I think this is the simple procedure I used. 1. zypper in scim-anthy (package name depends on language you want) 2. perl -i -pe 's/^INPUT_METHOD=.*/INPUT_METHOD="scim"/' /etc/sysconfig/input 3. (log in again) 4. Shift-Space (IIRC; I changed my configuration to Ctrl-Alt-Space because Shift-Space is too easy to trigger in daily life). 5. Type SUSEは大好きだよ and profit. + #2: Markus K (kamikazow) (2009-11-16 12:49:11) + My suggestion is not about writing a whole new IM stack, but instead + activating it easier and offering a native GUI for existing IM back- + ends. Especially on KDE -- which is openSUSE's default DE -- there is + no KDE GUI for switching input methods. In the KDE3 days there was + SKim. There is a KDE4-based GUI (see the links above), but it's + notshipped with openSUSE. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/307310
Feature changed by: Todd R (TheBlackCat) Feature #307310, revision 7 Title: Good CJK / East Asian input support (esp. KDE) openSUSE-11.2: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Important openSUSE-11.3: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Mandatory Requested by: Markus K (kamikazow) Description: Setting up CJK support for typing kanji has always been a bitch for me and I always failed -- especially under KDE 4, even though I consider myself an experienced computer user. Wang Hoi developed an applet that should make it all easier. It's currently in KDE-Review. He wrote about it: http://qiacat.blogspot.com/2009/03/as-my-first-post-first-say-hello-to.html http://mail.kde.org/pipermail/plasma-devel/2009-May/005420.html Discussion: #1: Jan Engelhardt (jengelh) (2009-08-12 17:06:12) There is not much that can fail, actually. I think this is the simple procedure I used. 1. zypper in scim-anthy (package name depends on language you want) 2. perl -i -pe 's/^INPUT_METHOD=.*/INPUT_METHOD="scim"/' /etc/sysconfig/input 3. (log in again) 4. Shift-Space (IIRC; I changed my configuration to Ctrl-Alt-Space because Shift-Space is too easy to trigger in daily life). 5. Type SUSEは大好きだよ and profit. #2: Markus K (kamikazow) (2009-11-16 12:49:11) My suggestion is not about writing a whole new IM stack, but instead activating it easier and offering a native GUI for existing IM back- ends. Especially on KDE -- which is openSUSE's default DE -- there is no KDE GUI for switching input methods. In the KDE3 days there was SKim. There is a KDE4-based GUI (see the links above), but it's notshipped with openSUSE. + #3: Todd R (theblackcat) (2010-01-11 23:50:59) + As best as I can tell this, or something like it, is already present in + the KDE4 factory repository. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/307310
Feature changed by: Rémy Marquis (Spyhawk) Feature #307310, revision 8 Title: Good CJK / East Asian input support (esp. KDE) openSUSE-11.2: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Important openSUSE-11.3: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Mandatory Requested by: Markus K (kamikazow) Description: Setting up CJK support for typing kanji has always been a bitch for me and I always failed -- especially under KDE 4, even though I consider myself an experienced computer user. Wang Hoi developed an applet that should make it all easier. It's currently in KDE-Review. He wrote about it: http://qiacat.blogspot.com/2009/03/as-my-first-post-first-say-hello-to.html http://mail.kde.org/pipermail/plasma-devel/2009-May/005420.html Discussion: #1: Jan Engelhardt (jengelh) (2009-08-12 17:06:12) There is not much that can fail, actually. I think this is the simple procedure I used. 1. zypper in scim-anthy (package name depends on language you want) 2. perl -i -pe 's/^INPUT_METHOD=.*/INPUT_METHOD="scim"/' /etc/sysconfig/input 3. (log in again) 4. Shift-Space (IIRC; I changed my configuration to Ctrl-Alt-Space because Shift-Space is too easy to trigger in daily life). 5. Type SUSEは大好きだよ and profit. #2: Markus K (kamikazow) (2009-11-16 12:49:11) My suggestion is not about writing a whole new IM stack, but instead activating it easier and offering a native GUI for existing IM back- ends. Especially on KDE -- which is openSUSE's default DE -- there is no KDE GUI for switching input methods. In the KDE3 days there was SKim. There is a KDE4-based GUI (see the links above), but it's notshipped with openSUSE. #3: Todd R (theblackcat) (2010-01-11 23:50:59) As best as I can tell this, or something like it, is already present in the KDE4 factory repository. + #4: Rémy Marquis (spyhawk) (2010-02-06 16:48:30) (reply to #3) + I can't find kimpanel in any of the KDE Factory repo. However, it is + available in the home:swyear:ibus + (https://build.opensuse.org/project/show?project=home%3Aswyear% + 3Aibus) repo. + I use it with fcitx as IME, and it works really well. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/307310
Feature changed by: Andreas Jaeger (a_jaeger) Feature #307310, revision 9 Title: Good CJK / East Asian input support (esp. KDE) - openSUSE-11.2: Unconfirmed + openSUSE-11.2: Rejected by Andreas Jaeger (a_jaeger) + reject date: 2010-11-15 09:56:19 + reject reason: Not done in time for openSUSE 11.3. Priority Requester: Important - openSUSE-11.3: Unconfirmed + openSUSE-11.3: Rejected by Andreas Jaeger (a_jaeger) + reject date: 2010-11-15 09:56:15 + reject reason: Not done in time for openSUSE 11.2 + . Priority Requester: Mandatory + openSUSE-11.4: New + Priority + Requester: Important Requested by: Markus K (kamikazow) Description: Setting up CJK support for typing kanji has always been a bitch for me and I always failed -- especially under KDE 4, even though I consider myself an experienced computer user. Wang Hoi developed an applet that should make it all easier. It's currently in KDE-Review. He wrote about it: http://qiacat.blogspot.com/2009/03/as-my-first-post-first-say-hello-to.html http://mail.kde.org/pipermail/plasma-devel/2009-May/005420.html - Discussion: #1: Jan Engelhardt (jengelh) (2009-08-12 17:06:12) There is not much that can fail, actually. I think this is the simple procedure I used. 1. zypper in scim-anthy (package name depends on language you want) 2. perl -i -pe 's/^INPUT_METHOD=.*/INPUT_METHOD="scim"/' /etc/sysconfig/input 3. (log in again) 4. Shift-Space (IIRC; I changed my configuration to Ctrl-Alt-Space because Shift-Space is too easy to trigger in daily life). 5. Type SUSEは大好きだよ and profit. #2: Markus K (kamikazow) (2009-11-16 12:49:11) My suggestion is not about writing a whole new IM stack, but instead activating it easier and offering a native GUI for existing IM back- ends. Especially on KDE -- which is openSUSE's default DE -- there is no KDE GUI for switching input methods. In the KDE3 days there was SKim. There is a KDE4-based GUI (see the links above), but it's notshipped with openSUSE. #3: Todd R (theblackcat) (2010-01-11 23:50:59) As best as I can tell this, or something like it, is already present in the KDE4 factory repository. #4: Rémy Marquis (spyhawk) (2010-02-06 16:48:30) (reply to #3) I can't find kimpanel in any of the KDE Factory repo. However, it is available in the home:swyear:ibus (https://build.opensuse.org/project/show?project=home%3Aswyear% 3Aibus) repo. I use it with fcitx as IME, and it works really well. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/307310
Feature changed by: Rémy Marquis (Spyhawk) Feature #307310, revision 10 Title: Good CJK / East Asian input support (esp. KDE) openSUSE-11.2: Rejected by Andreas Jaeger (a_jaeger) reject date: 2010-11-15 09:56:19 reject reason: Not done in time for openSUSE 11.3. Priority Requester: Important openSUSE-11.3: Rejected by Andreas Jaeger (a_jaeger) reject date: 2010-11-15 09:56:15 reject reason: Not done in time for openSUSE 11.2 . Priority Requester: Mandatory - openSUSE-11.4: New + openSUSE-11.4: Duplicate of #308892 Priority Requester: Important Requested by: Markus K (kamikazow) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: Setting up CJK support for typing kanji has always been a bitch for me and I always failed -- especially under KDE 4, even though I consider myself an experienced computer user. Wang Hoi developed an applet that should make it all easier. It's currently in KDE-Review. He wrote about it: http://qiacat.blogspot.com/2009/03/as-my-first-post-first-say-hello-to.html http://mail.kde.org/pipermail/plasma-devel/2009-May/005420.html + Relations: + - (feature/duplicate: 308892) Discussion: #1: Jan Engelhardt (jengelh) (2009-08-12 17:06:12) There is not much that can fail, actually. I think this is the simple procedure I used. 1. zypper in scim-anthy (package name depends on language you want) 2. perl -i -pe 's/^INPUT_METHOD=.*/INPUT_METHOD="scim"/' /etc/sysconfig/input 3. (log in again) 4. Shift-Space (IIRC; I changed my configuration to Ctrl-Alt-Space because Shift-Space is too easy to trigger in daily life). 5. Type SUSEは大好きだよ and profit. #2: Markus K (kamikazow) (2009-11-16 12:49:11) My suggestion is not about writing a whole new IM stack, but instead activating it easier and offering a native GUI for existing IM back- ends. Especially on KDE -- which is openSUSE's default DE -- there is no KDE GUI for switching input methods. In the KDE3 days there was SKim. There is a KDE4-based GUI (see the links above), but it's notshipped with openSUSE. #3: Todd R (theblackcat) (2010-01-11 23:50:59) As best as I can tell this, or something like it, is already present in the KDE4 factory repository. #4: Rémy Marquis (spyhawk) (2010-02-06 16:48:30) (reply to #3) I can't find kimpanel in any of the KDE Factory repo. However, it is available in the home:swyear:ibus (https://build.opensuse.org/project/show?project=home%3Aswyear% 3Aibus) repo. I use it with fcitx as IME, and it works really well. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/307310
Feature changed by: Rémy Marquis (Spyhawk) Feature #307310, revision 11 Title: Good CJK / East Asian input support (esp. KDE) openSUSE-11.2: Rejected by Andreas Jaeger (a_jaeger) reject date: 2010-11-15 09:56:19 reject reason: Not done in time for openSUSE 11.3. Priority Requester: Important openSUSE-11.3: Rejected by Andreas Jaeger (a_jaeger) reject date: 2010-11-15 09:56:15 reject reason: Not done in time for openSUSE 11.2 . Priority Requester: Mandatory openSUSE-11.4: Duplicate of #308892 Priority Requester: Important Requested by: Markus K (kamikazow) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: Setting up CJK support for typing kanji has always been a bitch for me and I always failed -- especially under KDE 4, even though I consider myself an experienced computer user. Wang Hoi developed an applet that should make it all easier. It's currently in KDE-Review. He wrote about it: http://qiacat.blogspot.com/2009/03/as-my-first-post-first-say-hello-to.html http://mail.kde.org/pipermail/plasma-devel/2009-May/005420.html Relations: - (feature/duplicate: 308892) Discussion: #1: Jan Engelhardt (jengelh) (2009-08-12 17:06:12) There is not much that can fail, actually. I think this is the simple procedure I used. 1. zypper in scim-anthy (package name depends on language you want) 2. perl -i -pe 's/^INPUT_METHOD=.*/INPUT_METHOD="scim"/' /etc/sysconfig/input 3. (log in again) 4. Shift-Space (IIRC; I changed my configuration to Ctrl-Alt-Space because Shift-Space is too easy to trigger in daily life). 5. Type SUSEは大好きだよ and profit. #2: Markus K (kamikazow) (2009-11-16 12:49:11) My suggestion is not about writing a whole new IM stack, but instead activating it easier and offering a native GUI for existing IM back- ends. Especially on KDE -- which is openSUSE's default DE -- there is no KDE GUI for switching input methods. In the KDE3 days there was SKim. There is a KDE4-based GUI (see the links above), but it's notshipped with openSUSE. #3: Todd R (theblackcat) (2010-01-11 23:50:59) As best as I can tell this, or something like it, is already present in the KDE4 factory repository. #4: Rémy Marquis (spyhawk) (2010-02-06 16:48:30) (reply to #3) I can't find kimpanel in any of the KDE Factory repo. However, it is available in the home:swyear:ibus (https://build.opensuse.org/project/show?project=home%3Aswyear% 3Aibus) repo. I use it with fcitx as IME, and it works really well. + #5: Rémy Marquis (spyhawk) (2010-11-25 16:30:09) + This feature could be considered as duplicate of 308892 as SCIM is + deprecated. KDE integration can also be handled in the same feature. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/307310
Feature changed by: Satoru Matsumoto (HeliosReds) Feature #307310, revision 12 Title: Good CJK / East Asian input support (esp. KDE) openSUSE-11.2: Rejected by Andreas Jaeger (a_jaeger) reject date: 2010-11-15 09:56:19 reject reason: Not done in time for openSUSE 11.3. Priority Requester: Important openSUSE-11.3: Rejected by Andreas Jaeger (a_jaeger) reject date: 2010-11-15 09:56:15 reject reason: Not done in time for openSUSE 11.2 . Priority Requester: Mandatory openSUSE-11.4: Duplicate of #308892 + Master status: Rejected by Satoru Matsumoto <helios_reds@gmx.net> + reject reason: 11.4 has been already released. Priority Requester: Important Requested by: Markus K (kamikazow) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: Setting up CJK support for typing kanji has always been a bitch for me and I always failed -- especially under KDE 4, even though I consider myself an experienced computer user. Wang Hoi developed an applet that should make it all easier. It's currently in KDE-Review. He wrote about it: http://qiacat.blogspot.com/2009/03/as-my-first-post-first-say-hello-to.html http://mail.kde.org/pipermail/plasma-devel/2009-May/005420.html Relations: - (feature/duplicate: 308892) Discussion: #1: Jan Engelhardt (jengelh) (2009-08-12 17:06:12) There is not much that can fail, actually. I think this is the simple procedure I used. 1. zypper in scim-anthy (package name depends on language you want) 2. perl -i -pe 's/^INPUT_METHOD=.*/INPUT_METHOD="scim"/' /etc/sysconfig/input 3. (log in again) 4. Shift-Space (IIRC; I changed my configuration to Ctrl-Alt-Space because Shift-Space is too easy to trigger in daily life). 5. Type SUSEは大好きだよ and profit. #2: Markus K (kamikazow) (2009-11-16 12:49:11) My suggestion is not about writing a whole new IM stack, but instead activating it easier and offering a native GUI for existing IM back- ends. Especially on KDE -- which is openSUSE's default DE -- there is no KDE GUI for switching input methods. In the KDE3 days there was SKim. There is a KDE4-based GUI (see the links above), but it's notshipped with openSUSE. #3: Todd R (theblackcat) (2010-01-11 23:50:59) As best as I can tell this, or something like it, is already present in the KDE4 factory repository. #4: Rémy Marquis (spyhawk) (2010-02-06 16:48:30) (reply to #3) I can't find kimpanel in any of the KDE Factory repo. However, it is available in the home:swyear:ibus (https://build.opensuse.org/project/show?project=home%3Aswyear% 3Aibus) repo. I use it with fcitx as IME, and it works really well. #5: Rémy Marquis (spyhawk) (2010-11-25 16:30:09) This feature could be considered as duplicate of 308892 as SCIM is deprecated. KDE integration can also be handled in the same feature. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/307310
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