Pressing Esc on the Chinese keyboard layout will toggle the mouse input between virtual QWERTY keyboard and virtual Chinese keyboard. The key will also turn on/off your keyboard input conversion. Pressing Esc on your keyboard has the same function.

In the 1970s to 1980s, large keyboards with thousands of keys were used to input Chinese. Each key was mapped to several Chinese characters. To type a character, one pressed the character key and then a selection key.[3][4] There were also experimental "radical keyboards" with dozens to several hundreds keys. Chinese characters were decomposed into "radicals", each of which was represented by a key.[1][5][6] Unwieldy and difficult to use, these keyboards became obsolete after the introduction of Cangjie input method, the first method to use only the standard keyboard and make Chinese touch typing possible.[6]


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Other methods include handwriting recognition, OCR and voice recognition. The computer itself must first be "trained" before the first or second of these methods are used; that is, the new user enters the system in a special "learning mode" so that the system can learn to identify their handwriting or speech patterns. The latter two methods are used less frequently than keyboard-based input methods and suffer from relatively high error rates, especially when used without proper "training", though higher error rates are an acceptable trade-off to many users. In recent years, online IME have become more scarce, owing to the proliferation of cellphones and apps.[14]

I have Ubuntu Server 20.04.2 LTS VM on virtualbox. After trying multiple ways I am unable to have Chinese keyboard on vm.(I am using "ubuntu-20.04.2-live-server-amd64.iso" for my VM on virtualbox).I have tried following:

Take a look at this for general guidance. I've not attempted to install anything other than the Dvorak keyboard layout, but I believe something similar would work for a keyboard layout for another language.

I got an English keyboard, so I installed that to begin with. Followed these steps for the Budgie desktop to get chinese keyboard -keyboard-layout/en/ (I use zhuyin keyboard, so installed those packages) and tweaked the settings to my liking in the Region&Language settings. To begin with it seemed okay except that when I press space it didn't show the candidates, a bug with Ibus apparently.

Thanks for reaching out! It seems like when you are using the Chinese keyboard your predictive text is not properly detecting what you are typing, is that right? Does this issue seem to happen only in the Facebook Messenger, like in your screenshot? Does this issue seem to happen with certain words? Do you use multiple keyboards on your iPhone?

I use the ctrl+space hotkey to switch between english/chinese when writing documents. The chinese keyboard stops working randomly, however. I can see CH selected in the language bar, but typing in Word gives regular english letters (the pinyin popup doesn't appear). But if I switch to Google Chrome, it works. Why is this happening and how can this be fixed? So far I've only found that restarting the PC works, but restarting it every 20 minutes is hugely impractical.

The second also recommended an additional package chewing-utils and it got installed too. But there is still not a single input method for Chinese under Keyboard / Layout in my System Settings Module. The whole list of options seems completely messed up since there is Chinese, but under it only a plain Latin keyboard is offered.

Thanks all, we have added the underlines on Spanish. For Italian, we got a range of conflicting feedback on whether or not { } should be on the keyboard, so we decided to leave it off. For Chinese, we proceeded with the keyboard as-is.

Hi, deseperado to get a new laptop, as my Intel ThinkPad do not support Windows 11. Not critical, as Windows 10, still supported until 2025. I am completely sold out to the concept of Framework, modular, customizable design and reparable. But the fact that do not have a Spanish keyboard availability, its holding me to get it. I can get an extra keyboard but wanted to avoid to buy it later. My two cents. Thank you. JP

Security researchers at Citizen Lab discovered a number of cryptographic vulnerabilities in the Sogou Input Method keyboard software made by Tencent, the most popular input method in China. These vulnerabilities allow adversaries with a privileged network position (such as an ISP or anyone with access to upstream routers) to read the text a user inputs on a device in real-time as it's being typed. Users of the Sogou Keyboard are highly encouraged to upgrade to patched versions that fix this vulnerability:

Ok, I am not familiar with Google Input Tools - but my suggestion would be to first disable these and use instead the default input method provided by your operating system. MacOS and Windows both provide a Cantonese (Traditional) input method. if these works fine (as they do for me), then the issue is probably with the Google Input Tools and not with Coda.

for reference: I am using the standard pinyin keyboard on Mac Os and run coda in Chrome, and I have no issues.

Recently it was brought to my attention that there seems to be some sort of bug in the keyboard layout shortcut handling for some layouts. There could be a similar bug with fcitx, but as it has a broader scope than LXQt (only a few distros use LXQt but LOTS, all with different desktop environments, use fcitx), I think the likelihood is much less. One thing you might want to do is only use the system tray icon to switch because then you eliminate any likelihood of shortcut conflicts.

Hi, I'm trying to install the Japanese and Traditional Chinese (Zhuyin/ bopomofo) keyboard input in Zorin OS 16 (Core) but it's not working. I run the process just like the instruction from here (How to add a keyboard layout). When I switch the language to Japanese/ Chinese, its still working just like an english keyboard.

Please note that the help guides listed here are for languages that Miami currently teaches. If you have questions about setting up a language keyboard for a language that Miami does not currently teach, please contact the ILRC Director, Daniel Meyers, and he will assist you in getting your specific language set up.

For some Latin-based languages, such as French, German, Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish, you may have an easier time with diacritical character input by using the US International keyboard layout You might decide to choose to use this layout over memorizing the individual ANSI codes for each character.

To enter ALT codes, be sure your Number Lock key is pressed for your numeric keypad. Press the ALT key and hold it while typing the number combination on the numeric keypad to the right of the keyboard.

The Greek polytonic keyboard is set up very similarly to the QWERTY English keyboard. The notible exception is on the far right-hand side of the keyboard, where several accent and breath mark glyphs can be combined with other letters.

I'm in a high school setting and this fall (just learned two days ago) we're going to have a large influx of Chinese speaking students... and I've been given the task of getting several Chinese input languages and keyboards/layouts available for them. We're using a mix of WinXP and Win7.

I next ran gpupdate /force /boot and after the PC rebooted, logged in as the local administrator. Launched Word, changed the language/keyboard in the Language Bar from English to Chinese Simplified PRC (pic allie_002.png), and typed the character 'nihao' in Word and after pressing the space-bar, they correctly changed into the Chinese characters (pic allie_003.png).

Below is the contents of the add_chinese_keyboard_hkcu.vbs script (also attached). Does someone know what I'm doing wrong that standard domain users are (a) not seeing all the Chinese icons in the Language Bar and (b) typing in Word does not work when it does for both domain and local admins on the same PC?

OK, I finally figured it out. Essentially, it was a permissions issue. In the Group Policy Management app, I opened the listing of Group Policy Objects, single-clicked on the GP for CHINESE keyboards... and in the right-hand pane under Security Filtering, I added Domain Users. It already had Authenticated Users, which I thought should have worked for domain users as well, but once I added Domain Users to Security Filtering... deleted my test-user's profile... ran gpupdate /force /boot... and logged in as my test-user, it worked perfectly!

The Chinese input language and keyboard work fine for a domain-admin, but not for a standard (non-admin) domain-user AND the standard domain-user doesn't see the additional Language Bar icons for the Chinese keyboard when "CH" is chosen.

make a rule in the GPO for the domain user name they are going to be using, that has the keyboard layout predefined. in the test computer doesn't work because you make it with the domain admin, make the policy for the domain user and try it out.

I have a page on Japanese, not Chinese, but the procedure is almost the same, at Inputting Japanese in Linux and some BSDs. It focuses mostly on fcitx, rather than ibus, but if using Gnome, ibus is probably easier. Type language in the searchbox, and it should give you a choice of languages to add. With Gnome, if I remember correctly, at that point, you have to click keyboard, and choose your input method. I give a bit more explanation on the page mentioned above, under the CentOS.8x-9x section. (For most of it, I cover fcitx, which I prefer when not using Gnome). I mention anthy and kkc, but you would need pinyan or similar for Chinese. 006ab0faaa

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