Thanks for the tip. I just noticed that in 10.6 it reset next language  
as command space, which was the same as my envoking shortcut with  
quicksilver. So I was envoking and changing the language at the same  
time. It's fixed now.

drew

On Oct 3, 2009, at 3:00 PM, Jon Stovell (a.k.a. Sesquipedalian) wrote:

>
> 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
> >

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