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 people use Pinyin 
because they imposed the use of simplified Chinese characters.  It surprises me 
to hear that ktrans uses Cangjie, Japanese keyboards let you input kana 
directly, and the use of kana to write without kanji is common, specially in 
books for kids, so it seams more natural to me to make a kana->kanji conversion 
(or romaji->kana->kanji in Western keyboards). But I'm not Japanese, maybe 
Cangjie is faster, I've never tryed.
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