I see three ways to address this: 1) im-switch is add the current (or requested) locale to /SupportedUnicodeLocales 2) /etc/scim/global to include all locales by default (my least favorite) 3) scim itself to ignore /SupportedUnicodeLocales always attempt to support the current locale
I'm not very familiar with the architecture of im-switch and scim, and so am unsure of the ancillary effects that might develop as a result of any of these choices. From my quick review, I would suspect that the first is the least intrusive (although not necessarily correct), and would involve parsing (or creating) ~/.scim/global to include the appropriate locale. For which of these (if any) should a patch be generated? Alternately, is this more complicated than it looks, and does the patch need to be somewhere else? -- [Feisty Edgy Dapper] language-support-"any CJK language" doesn't set up a way to input this language with scim if the session doesn't correspond to this particular CJK (Chinese, Japanese or Korean) language https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/34282 You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Bugs, which is a direct subscriber. -- ubuntu-bugs mailing list ubuntu-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs