> http://im-ja.sourceforge.net/
> is a pretty effective input module for Japanese input in GTK2.
> 
> The nice thing about using a GTK-native input module as opposed to a
> generic XIM method is consistency: the helper windows that pop when
> entering Japanese look and operate like other GTK controls.  Of
> course, im-ja still uses canna as a backend.

Thank you for that link! Thats exactly the kind of thing Ive been
looking for.

I noticed that it includes a version of kanjipad, one of my favorite
toys. If anyone is interested, Ive reworked it to eliminate the use of
jis, sjis, that binary configuration datafile, changed it to use unicode
internally, fixed some bugs in the kpengine, updated the stroke
data itself, etc. My aim was to make the stroke data maintainable, so
ive reverted it to a variant of the original tdr format.

If anyone is interested, i made a tarball at:
http://home.earthlink.net/~srintuar26/data/kanjipad.utf8expir.tar.gz

I dont know if Owen's been working on it lately. 
I havent heard from him, but I imagine hes pretty busy,

--
Linux-UTF8:   i18n of Linux on all levels
Archive:      http://mail.nl.linux.org/linux-utf8/

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