Mike Nordell wrote:
> 
> Andrew Dunbar wrote:
> > If you try to enter Hiragana, Katakana, or Korean Hangul, you'll
> > just get "?" characters since these are language specific.
> >
> > I'm pretty sure the exact "implicit conversion" is happening with
> > WM_IME_CHAR.
> >
> > Okay so that's the treatise on the problem - does anybody know
> > what special trickery is required on Windows 2000?
> 
> No, but perhaps some ideas can be found at
> http://mspress.microsoft.com/prod/books/sampchap/2323.htm
> 
> Also, if you're using MSVC you could try spying on the keyboard events using
> Spy++ and see what differs between AW and sny other application.

Thanks for the URL.  Spy++ didn't help.  It looks like a slightly
undocumented solution is to call ImmGetCompositionStringW instead
of ImmGetCompositionString if I know I'm on a Unicode-enabled system.
My theory is that non Unicode-enabled systems will only support
a single IME so this may not be the final answer.

Two questions:  What's the most correct way to test for Unicode-
enabled Windows?  GetSystemMetrics doesn't have a test.  I can think
of several hacky ways but there ought to be a standard way.

Is it safe for me to use emitChar / EventMapper::keystroke
since an IME can actually return an arbitrarily long string
instead of a single character?  I'm not sure what assumptions
these functions really make.

Thanks for any enlightenment (:

Andrew.

-- 
http://linguaphile.sourceforge.net

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