Well, it works for me as I described above. But try this: in the Input Sources pane of Language & Text preferences, set the input source option to use the same one in all documents. Make sure you are currently set to use English input, then invoke QS and use it to perform some action. Once the QS command window has disappeared, you may go back to allowing different inputs for each document, or continue using one global input at a time if you prefer.
On Oct 2, 5:46 pm, drew <[email protected]> wrote: > I've tried that before, and it keeps switching it back whenever I > envoke Quicksilver via keyboard shortcut. Any other possibilities? > > On Oct 2, 3:16 pm, "Jon Stovell (a.k.a. Sesquipedalian)" > > > > <[email protected]> wrote: > > In Leopard, the input menu defined input globally, such that switching > > languages affected all text entered everywhere. In Snow Leopard, input > > language can be defined differently for each document window. This is > > a good thing, because it means that even if you are working in > > Japanese elsewhere, you can now set QS to always use English. > > Unfortunately, in your case you somehow have it set to use Japanese, > > but this isn't hard to fix. > > > First, open the Input Sources pane of Language & Text preferences. > > Make sure that your input sources are set to allow a different one for > > each document. Then take note of the keyboard shortcuts that are set > > for switching between input languages. Next, invoke QS's command > > window. Once QS is active, use the keyboard shortcut to switch input > > to English. That's it. Finally, in the future simply take care not to > > switch inputs while working in the QS command window. > > > The reason you have to use the keyboard shortcut here is because using > > the mouse to click the input menu causes QS to dismiss itself, which > > makes it impossible to use the menu to control the input in the > > command window. > > > On Oct 2, 1:11 pm, drew <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > Hi, > > > > I'm a long time qs user, and I recently upgraded to 3825 b56a7, b/c of > > > upgrading to Snow Leopard. Prior to upgrading, If I was in English > > > input, it would stay in English, but now, if I have Japanese input > > > turned on, it automatically switches to Japanese (hiragana) and I am > > > forced to switch it back. It's very frustrating. Does anyone have any > > > suggestions on what I can do? > > > > thanks, > > > drew
