Thursday, February 18, 2010

Av Korean How Do Chinese An Japanese An Korean Computer Keyboards Work?

How do chinese an japanese an korean computer keyboards work? - av korean

Language symbols Av da dat lyk

3 comments:

Scott said...

They all have keyboards that look identical to you. Yes, they are exactly the same. How can type Chinese, Korean or Japanese, then? Everyone knows how their own language is written with English letters. His teams have a simple program that shows the disposition of China / Japan / Korean characters when entering one or more Roman (English) letters. We all learn in school so early.

They thought they would have a keyboard with keys of 6000? As the answer is the last thought at all? They do the same thing with cell phones to send text messages.

cld said...

In general, operating systems integrate IME or Input Method Editors, the programs that you will be granted write in languages other than English. At EMI, there is a built-in dictionary and a table of glyphs with the relevant sources.
So, if you set a Japanese IME for writing text and walk in romaji hiragana, EMI definition files used to connect to the table of glyphs together to produce icons.

Mokona - The Hyper Bunny said...

Well, you have the language of a website. Japanese keyboards, like the cards romanized spelling is fairly simple. Korean keyboards are different. The consonants are on the left and the vowels on the right side. I'm not sure how the Chinese. I hope that helps. :)

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