And setting Sogou-pinyin as input method (using fcitx-configtool) and restarting, I can actually see a keyboard icon on the bottom right corner of the screen and select Sogou as input method. However, no chinese characters appear as I expected (I had some experience using Sogou in the past).

Often, once you've set the fcitx-configtool, you still have to right click on that keyboard icon and look for an option to configure current input method or something similar. 

Click the plus sign at lower left. Uncheck the box that reads only show current

language. The box below it is the search box, type sogoupinyan in there. In the

top textbox, you should now see sogopinyan, and, once you highlight it,

you should be able to click the OK button. Do it and close the window. You may have to log out and log in again.


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This is just a guess, though, judging from what I've run into with some systems and Japanese. (As I've never installed fcitx-sogoupinyan, I don't know the exact name that you'll type in the search box, but it should be whatever you used with fcitx-configtool).

Also, note that I haven't tried this with Arch, where I use a minimal desktop and just configure it manually. To do it manually, you start fcitx and then stop X completely. You look for $HOME/.config/fcitx and in there is a file called profile. Look for your input method, sogou, sogoupinyan, or whatever it's called. If, after its listing it says False, change that to True. Save the file and restart X.

Uncheck the box that reads only show current

language. The box below it is the search box, type sogoupinyan in there. In the

top textbox, you should now see sogopinyan, and, once you highlight it,

you should be able to click the OK button. Do it and close the window. You may have to log out and log in again.

I'm sorry. As I said, all untested by me on Chinese and Arch. The only other thing I can suggest is the other thing I mentioned, directly editing the $HOME/.config/fcitx/profile file. Hopefully, someone with more knowledge about Chinese with fcitx will see this and help.

Sogou pinyin for linux is joint development by Sogou Inc. and UbuntuKylin. The version took one and a half years to development. Add new support wubi input method and symbolic feature. We make adaptation and fix bugs on UbuntuKylin 19.04 and UbuntuKylin 19.10. Currently, Sogou for linux running in UbuntuKylin have same effect comparison with windows native.

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.

I reinstalled Lubuntu 20.04 while on my break, updated it, and then installed the aforementioned fcitx packages, but did NOT install Sogou this time. I then configured fcitx and rebooted. Problem solved!

That will take you to a page with further instructions while at the same time downloading the Debian package. Save the package rather than installing it. At time of writing that will get you sogoupinyin_2.4.0.2942_amd64.deb (and FWIW the URL is here). 152ee80cbc

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