Apparently your online input method does not support any other native keyboard than a US QWERTY; you seem to bond keycodes instead of the punctuation characters indicated. E.g. an a French Azerty keyboard typing "c;" does not replace it with "ç", you have to type "c$" instead (the dollar sign is typed on a French keyboard on the last key of the second row, near the Enter key, where the US keyboard maps the semicolon). Why do you use scancodes to make the compositions ?
It's hard to convince people that your input method is "Pan European" if it requires a native US keyboard. Le 17 avril 2012 23:40, Ed Trager <[email protected]> a écrit : > A long time in the making, I am finally making "Key Curry" public! > > "Key Curry" is a web application and set of web components that allows > one to easily type many world languages and specialized orthographies > on the web. Please check it out and provide me feedback: > > http://unifont.org/keycurry/ > > In addition to supporting major world languages and orthographies, I > hope that "Key Curry" makes it easy for language advocates and web > developers to provide support for the orthographies of minority > languages -- many of which are not currently supported (or are only > poorly supported) by the major operating system vendors. > > Under the hood, the software uses a javascript user interface > framework that I wrote called "Gladiator Components" along with the > popular "jQuery" javascript library as a foundation. I have used HTML > 5 technologies such as localStorage to implement certain features. > > Currently, Key Curry appears to work well in the latest versions of > Google Chrome, Firefox, and Safari on devices with standard QWERTY > keyboards (e.g. laptops, desktop computers, netbooks, etc.). Recent > versions of Opera and Internet Explorer version 9 appear to have bugs > which limit the ability of Key Curry to operate as designed. The app > is not likely to work well on older versions of any browser. I have > not yet tested IE 10 on Windows 8. > > Although Key Curry appears to load flawlessly on the very few Android > and Apple iOS tablet and/or mobile devices that I have "dabbled" with, > the virtual keyboards on those devices are very different from > physical keyboards and I have not yet investigated that problem area > at all - so don't expect it to work on your iPad or other mobile > device. > > Constructive criticism and feedback is most welcome. I have many > additional plans for Key Curry "in the works" - but I'll leave further > commentary to another day! > > - Ed >

