>>>>> In <288YQ7Y33V3RF.38NPGPX4H2CHU@homearch.localdomain> >>>>> "Silvan Jegen" <m...@sillymon.ch> 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 characters are used though ... >> >> They would use RIME, https://rime.im a free software widely >> recognized among Chinese users who are not satisfied with default >> Pinyin. But unfortunately that thing is written in C++ so making a >> port is unliky. SJ> Funnily enough I use Rime on my Linux machine to input Simplified SJ> Chinese. I honestly just switched a Rime input setting to something that SJ> looks like pinyin but the suggestions seem better to me than the old SJ> IME that I used ... I should probably invest some time in understanding SJ> how the thing actually is supposed to be used (documentation in English SJ> seems sparse and my Chinese sucks).
RIME was popularized because most other Pinyin based IMEs on the market suck for traditional Chinese input, for these IMEs' suggestion dictionaries were usually directly substituted from simplified Chinese versions, but mapping simplified Chinese to transitional Chinese is very context sensitive. The byproduct of RIME is the OpenCC https://github.com/BYVoid/OpenCC library that can handles all the trivia of these kinds of translation. The SC support for RIME was contributed by community, I think, and the author of RIME uses Cangjie. Cangjie was not officially designed for simplified Chinese but was extended to be able to handle that. I heard rumors that the author refused to add a switch to prioritize simplified Chinese characters for Cangjie in RIME, so an external dictionary is used if users want to have that behavior. --- LDB ------------------------------------------ 9fans: 9fans Permalink: https://9fans.topicbox.com/groups/9fans/Tba6835d445e07919-M7654c6f7091bf0a32c7e3bca Delivery options: https://9fans.topicbox.com/groups/9fans/subscription