Yeah, skim works fine for me for a long time now (because it is
correctly configured).
Currently there's two ways to get scim, skim, pinyin working under Kubuntu:
Way #1: Install Ubuntu first, and then enable Chinese and "complex
script input support", and then install kubuntu-desktop (then KDE
se
I don't see the point of using scim instead of skim in a KDE
environment, at least not for Chinese (for Korean, it is a different
story, since skim has no configuration module). Skim is working fine for
me when typing Chinese.
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Kubuntu East Asian language display and input not as good as Ubuntu
"freeflying" in the IRC channel #kubuntu-devel claimed to have solved
this bug and committed the fix to the respository.
On Mon, Mar 3, 2008 at 12:38 AM, Ming Hua <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sat, Feb 09, 2008 at 01:12:05AM -, Yao Ziyuan wrote:
> >
> > Also refer to SCIM's official config
On Sat, Feb 09, 2008 at 01:12:05AM -, Yao Ziyuan wrote:
>
> Also refer to SCIM's official configuration guide:
>
> https://wiki.ubuntu.com/InputMethods/SCIM/Setup
This is just some documentation written by users on the wiki, and is by
no means "official".
Ming
2008.03.02
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Kubuntu East A
Also refer to SCIM's official configuration guide:
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/InputMethods/SCIM/Setup
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Kubuntu East Asian language display and input not as good as Ubuntu
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/181300
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Kubuntu
Team, which is a
According to a post in a Chinese Kubuntu user community, a correct way
of configuring scim for KDE is:
sudo apt-get install scim scim-pinyin scim-tables-zh im-switch -y
sudo apt-get install scim-qtimm scim-bridge scim-bridge-client-gtk -y
sudo apt-get install scim-bridge-client-qt scim-bridge-agen
On Feb 9, 2008 8:10 AM, Ziyuan Yao <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Now I have found a solution to this bug:
>
> Currently there are two distros that can make East Asian language
> input available to the user's KDE desktop as a tray icon if the user
> chooses/adds a East Asian language in his system, W
Now I have found a solution to this bug:
Currently there are two distros that can make East Asian language
input available to the user's KDE desktop as a tray icon if the user
chooses/adds a East Asian language in his system, WITHOUT FURTHER
CONFIGURATION BY THE USER:
(1) Ubuntu, with which if yo
It seems in Hardy Alpha 4 if I choose Chinese as the Installation
Language (which also implies it will be the default System Language
after installation), the installed Hardy will have a good Chinese
display font and immediate availability of Chinese input (Ctrl+Space),
although some Chinese charac
Scim-chinese is the old source package name of scim-pinyin. It's
irrelevant here.
** Changed in: scim-chinese (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Invalid
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Kubuntu East Asian language display and input not as good as Ubuntu
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/181300
You received this bug notification b
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