I am aware of the Chinese IME in Windows, which converts pinyin text I type into the Chinese stroked characters. This is not what I want. I want to type and view pinyin text, like r ch for example, with all the proper tone marks (diacritics).

The U.S. international keyboard that comes with Windows makes typing some accents easy, but apparently not macrons (the bar over the "u" in "ch"). The Mori keyboard has support for those; maybe you can hot switch between the two? Someone claimed to have made a derivative of the international keyboard that permits typing the macrons as well as other accents easily, but I haven't tried it out.


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It's a Windows IME that outputs Pinyin with tone marks, rather than Chinese characters. Type 1, 2, 3, or 4 after each syllable to add a tone mark -- just as people have been entering Pinyin since the days of ASCII characters:

You can use the Keyboard Layout Creator to create such a keyboard layout yourself. Off the top of my head I don't know a layout which enables you to type all the tones. As Bkkbrad mentioned, you can't type a macron on US International (which is what I'm using here). But modifying US International to add another dead key for macron shouldn't be too hard.

I've used a couple but in the end I went with QuickPinyin because it's the only one that didn't need to be installed. This is kind of cool because I can run from a USB stick on any PC, for example, the library computers which don't let me install software on them.

I came across the same problem today while trying to set up my Windows installation. There is a much better solution under Linux using ibus. Namely, you can set the output to traditional, simplified, or pinyin. This way you can take advantage of the built in recognition algorithms - they place the tone mark on the correct vowel, etc. It would be great if someone has a similar solution for Windows.

I just created -editor.com/ a couple of days ago, maybe it helps if you're still looking for a tool. Big advantage to other older web based Pinyin editors is that it's responsive, so works great on mobile

Pinyin -  (pn yn) is not just a tool for mastering Mandarin Chinese pronunciation: many students also find writing out pinyin is a great way to memorize the correct tones for new vocabulary.

So how exactly do you type pinyin with the correct tones? Some people simply stick the tone number at the end of the pinyin, for example ni3 hao3. It does the trick, but it doesn't quite look as nice as those pretty tones: n ho.

*Please Note: Old versions of Windows usually have the option of installing the PinyinTones program within the Windows language settings. Those with newer versions of Windows, such as Windows 10, seem not to have that option anymore, but the PinyinTones software can still be downloaded from their website directly. 

If you're unable to install directly through the built-in Windows settings, check out the second portion of this blog, where we explain how to download the software directly from the PinyinTones website.*

Microsoft Pinyin IME (Chinese: ; pinyin: wirun pnyn shrf) is the pinyin input method implementation developed by Microsoft and Harbin Institute of Technology. It is bundled with Microsoft Windows and Chinese editions of Microsoft Office. Various versions can be downloaded from Microsoft's website with some restrictions.

Since Windows 3.1x, Simplified Chinese edition of Windows automatically installed the bundled Microsoft Pinyin IME. Windows 98 came with version 1.5. The Version 2.0 was released with Microsoft Office 2000 and bundled with Windows 2000.[1]

Microsoft Office Pinyin IME 2007 is not supported by 64-bit versions of Windows.[3] The most recent version available for use on 64-bit systems is Microsoft Pinyin IME 4.0, however the final version of Microsoft Office Pinyin IME 2010 does feature full 64-bit support.

Pinyin is a romanization system for Chinese characters. While you can type in pinyin using an IME (Input Method Editor) such as Fcitx (installable via the Welcome application) to display Chinese characters on screen, there seems to be no program for GNU/Linux-based operating systems to type pinyin with tone marks (there are four different tones in Chinese which are displayed with different marks or accents). In Windows I have used the program Pinyinput to solve this task. The Sourceforge page can be found here. Does anyone know of a comparable alternative that runs under Ubuntu MATE?

How does windows (or the software on my ipod or any other software) order chinese files when sort by name is selected? It seems to have some kind of order, because when I set windows to reverse name sort it reverses the order its in when its set on name sort, I just have no idea what it is. It would be helpful for finding files if I knew how they were ordered so I wasn't just reading from top to bottom every time I want to find something. Or even better if there was some way of setting it to order alphabetically by first character, then second, like a dictionary.

My impression was that they always sort alphabetically by pinyin (not sure what they do with characters with more than one pinyin!). @fanglu Shouldn't the sorting arrow be pointing up to have Windows sort A-Z? Maybe try that.

Thanks adrianlondon. What that proves is that windows is capable of doing what I want, microsoft has just decided that anyone who is not chinese could not possibly want their chinese files sorted properly.

Actually, browsing around the internet it seems the user locale is used by programs to set up defaults for lots of things, so I don't really want to go changing it to chinese and having random websites start giving me their chinese versions by default. I get annoyed enough by programs installing chinese versions of themselves because I have the system locale set as Chinese.

The bottom line is I don't see why I should have to just to get sorts working properly. Windows clearly has the capacity to sort a lot of different types of character sets, but just disables sorting the ones it assumes you don't use and sorts by unicode.

It's not perfect. For example, when I lock my system the unlock message is in English but underneath where it should say "please swipe your finger"* it says it in Mandarin instead. Kind of cool, I suppose.

I have many Chinese computer files and am wondering how computers sort Chinese character file names. They don't seem to be sorted by pinyin and if I remember correctly, I don't believe they follow the traditional stroke-order order either

The candidate window has gone missing when I use traditional Chinese Pinyin input method. It used to show the candidate window after I press space bar, but now it directly inputs the first available option in the list and I cannot choose which word to use. I only started encountering this issue since I upgraded to El Capitan.

I have the same problem, the candidate window when switching to chinese language doesn't show, I have read and its suppose that with Capitan the predictive feature for chinese language is better, so no need the candidate box, THIS IS NOT TRUE, since I tried to write in chinese ( pinyin) and the characters chosen by the system are all wrong and doesn't make any sense in the text I am writing, is not like when you are using a microsoft software to write chinese that predict the characters according to the sense of what you are writing, and actually even in these programs, you always have to choose between the options of characters when you write chinese.

I am impressed that no-one else has reported this bug before, and is really annoying , Mac is yet not very good with asian languages input features, and now is even worst, when they claim to make it better, actually is even worst, hope can fix this bug asap.

I am tired of upgrading my mac, and every time I have to spend a whole day trying to figure out how to fix problems that before the upgrade didn't happen. Kind of scares my when there is a new system upgrade.

Does it work ok when you have created a new account and logged into that? If so, that normally means you are running something in your main account which is interfering (antivirus junk perhaps?) or you have a bad .plist in Home/Library/Preferences. Moving to an account which works may be an option.

After installing IBUS and pinyin input method, I want to set the preferences for this particular input method. It should be something like "Using Traditional Characters in the IBus Pinyin IME" in this webpage.

Please note that I can type Chinese with pinyin input method. I just want to configure the preferences for that particular input method, so the problem isn't about how to install ibus or installing an input method.

quick question regarding entering chinese character under windows... how can i type 'nu' with two dots above it when using windows language bar and a US keyboard under windows vista? when i type the pinyin "nu" as in female... i think the language bar is expecting me to type it with two dots above the character in order for it to find the correct character... but, i have no idea how to enter that on a US keyboard...

Chinese Pinyin Input is totally unusable after the new update, when i shift ENGLISH to Chinese Pinyin Input during i enter pinyin the word selection preview is not showing at all (but its showing outside of game (desktop instead of in game pinyin preview), if i play in full screen and i shift to Chinese pinyin input with alt shift my game will minimize automatically.

To enter Chinese characters in Windows, you need an IME (Input method editor). There are a few available online, including a free one for Windows (pre 2000) that can be downloaded from Microsoft.com. Windows 2000 and XP has an IME built in which supports a large number of writing systems and languages, not just Asian ones. This tutorial is designed for use with Windows 2000 or XP. 152ee80cbc

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