I would like to occasionally type some hangul letters by pressing SUPER+SPACE and select "Korean" input. But I am not able to make it work yet on Ubuntu 22.04. When I press SUPER+SPACE I can choose between korean and norwegian:

I started recently with Korean. My first impression about hangul (even before knowing that it was called like that) was that it was messy and very similar to kanjis but more "squared" and "circular" (more "plain"). Then I started step by step. I loved the idea of combining some basic characters and form blocks. For me that was mindblowing: it was like hiragana but with less characters. It is true that is not very phonetic, and in that sense I think it loses against Japanses Kana, but after learning some basic rules (ending consonant goes up if the next character starts with vowel, the double vowel sounds, etc.) all starts making sense.


Hangul


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In summary, my personal opinion (also not an expert) Japanese kana is more efficient from the phonetic point of view, but Korean hangul is more efficient speaking about the characters/words formation (blocks are awesome!).


This table contains 2,028 mappings of character encodings for Korean hangul from the East Asian Coded Character set (ANSI/NISO Z39.64, or "EACC") to character encodings in the Universal Character Set (UCS, ISO-IEC 10646)/Unicode. Character codes are given in hexadecimal notation. Each character is presented on a separate row.The first column contains the MARC-8 EACC 24-bit code (in hex), the second column contains the corresponding UCS/Unicode 16-bit code (in hex), the third column contains the UTF-8 code (in hex) for the UCS character, the fourth column contains a representation of the character (where possible), the fifth column contains a character name or description. Most East Asian ideographs are not given unique names in the MARC-8 or UCS/Unicode. For some characters alternate encodings in UCS/Unicode and UTF-8 are given. When that occurs the alternate UCS/Unicode 16-bit code column and alternate UTF-8 code column follow the character name. The alternative UCS/Unicode character codes are provided for cases where MARC-8 characters were mapped to UCS/Unicode characters in the Private Use Area (PUA). The alternative character code is a defined Unicode character which should be supported by applications that claim to support the full repertoire of defined Unicode characters. The characters in this table are sorted in EACC character code order.

After reading your hint about hangul having 21 vowels and 19 consonants, I wondered whether it is really necessary to use the multi-character input. Did you have a look at the Whiteboard layout shipping with Onboard? Onboard also supports mapping utf-8 characters directly to Onboard keys. Thus, I could imagine a layout showing the 40 letters of the hangul alphabet, so that any letter of the hangul alphabet can be typed by simply clicking on one key.

I don't know hangul, so I am not able to determine whether the above approach mapping the hangul alphabet directly to Onboard keys can be a solution. The direct input, if possible with the particularities of hangul, would simplify its input, but on the other hand, that layout would not be useful to learn the multi-character input used on regular keyboards. e24fc04721

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