> In <288YQ7Y33V3RF.38NPGPX4H2CHU@homearch.localdomain>
> "Silvan Jegen" wrote:
SJ> andp...@foxmail.com wrote:
>> On Friday, 22 July 2022, at 2:09 PM, Silvan Jegen wrote:
>> > Ah, I didn't know that! I also don't know anyone who does office work
>> > in a place where traditional Chinese
andp...@foxmail.com wrote:
> On Friday, 22 July 2022, at 2:09 PM, Silvan Jegen wrote:
> > Ah, I didn't know that! I also don't know anyone who does office work
> > in a place where traditional Chinese characters are used though ...
>
> They would use RIME, https://rime.im a free software widely
> r
On Friday, 22 July 2022, at 2:09 PM, Silvan Jegen wrote:
> Ah, I didn't know that! I also don't know anyone who does office work
in a place where traditional Chinese characters are used though ...
They would use RIME, https://rime.im a free software widely recognized among
Chinese users who are no
On 7/22/22 12:06, Sebastian Higgins wrote:
> A few things:
>
> 1. Cangjie is still widely used in places that uses traditional Chinese
> characters. You would still be required to be good at it if you apply for
> text-heavy office jobs in these places.
> 2. Radical-based/shape-based methods we
On Wednesday, 20 July 2022, at 11:15 PM, cigar562hfsp952fans wrote:
> I've often wondered that. What input methods do Chinese speakers use?
What do Chinese keyboards look like? How do they find/select the
character they want? Are different sets of characters available on
different computers, or
Heyhey!
Sebastian Higgins wrote:
> A few things:
>
> 1. Cangjie is still widely used in places that uses traditional
> Chinese characters. You would still be required to be good at it if
> you apply for text-heavy office jobs in these places.
Ah, I didn't know that! I also don't know anyone wh
A few things:
1. Cangjie is still widely used in places that uses traditional Chinese
characters. You would still be required to be good at it if you apply for
text-heavy office jobs in these places.
2. Radical-based/shape-based methods were extremely popular when the
prediction technology wa
Yep, Cangjie is one of those input methods based on shape I was talking about,
more appropriate for traditional Chinese characters used in Taiwan, Hong-Kong,
etc. South Korea still use kanji similar to traditional Chinese, but I don't
know what input method they use. Note that in mainland China
a...@sdf.org wrote:
> > I stumbled onto an instructive video on youtube not that long ago. I'm
> > sure there are a few you'll be able to search for. If I understand
> > correctly, it's a combination of entering the phoneme by the nearest
> > Latin letter, then select from a diminishing range of su