Ubuntu :: Can't Type In Hangul (korean) Because SCIM Isn't Working
May 2, 2011I can't type in hangul (korean) because SCIM isn't working. It's installed and configured to work.
Anyone else having this problem in 11.04?
I can't type in hangul (korean) because SCIM isn't working. It's installed and configured to work.
Anyone else having this problem in 11.04?
How can i type in Hangul (Korean) in Suse 11.4 ? When I select Korean, I can olnly write English
View 9 Replies View RelatedI am going to install a computer for multi-language support for English and the Korean Hangul written language. I would like to configure the input from the keyboard to switch from English to Korean. I have keyboard with English and Korean and I would like to configure one of the keyboard buttons to switch the input language similar to how Microsoft multi-language support works. What applications and configuration changes are necessary to implement this.
View 6 Replies View RelatedI originally made this post in Linux-General, but only one person was really answering the question and now he hasn't been responding, so I've come here since Scim is also Slackware related.Simply put, I need to be able to use Scim to input the Korean language.Here's the original thread:[URL]
View 14 Replies View Relatedi'm using Fecore Core 8, and i'm wondering how to get a package to change my keyboard from English to Hangul/Korean and back to English.
View 5 Replies View RelatedI have been having multiple problems setting up my friends computer to type korean. I installed Smart Common Input Method but none of the hot keys seem to register. If you need more info about the computer or installation just ask!
View 1 Replies View RelatedI'm using Centos 5.4 and have problem relate to the server's font. We installed Korean fonts on the server, but I can't read korean on the server, and I can't create file with a korean name.
View 2 Replies View RelatedHave 2 FC 14 servers. On both of them set system default language to German (de_DE), reboot, and all is as expected -- all menus and messages in German. Then changed system default back to English, reboot, both are back in English. Then changed system default to Korean (ko_KR), reboot. One server comes up in Korean as expected, but the other comes up in English.
/etc/sysconfig/i18n is ko_KR.utf8 as expected. SSH terminal and execute 'locale' and all variables set to 'ko_KR.UTF8' as expected. Start a GNOME session (thru VNC), open a terminal and 'locale' shows 'ko_KO.UTF8'. Changed default language back to German, reboot, everything comes up in German. Change it to Korean, reboot, and we're back to English (not even German). (Note: LANG=en_US is set as kernel boot option, do that's probably why not German here.) Have trolled through DMESG and /var/log/messages but do not see any error message.Tried 'yum groupremove "Korean Support"' to clear everything out, then re-installed it. Still the same result.
My goal is when test should be drawn using mono, sans serif family fonts, Korean font should be picked up.I have added below entry in fonts.conf and the font is also installed under fonts directory.
Using FC_DEBUG flag, I checked that score for this font is not coming the "Best Score".I am not sure what the problem is, If I expect fontconfig to just replace sans with my font, it should take that.
I'm trying to teach myself Japanese.So, naturally, I signed up at a Japanese social website for language practice. Now, all I need is to be able to type in Japanese. I followed the instructions at this site, and everything seems to work. Everything, that is, except kate. Every other app works fine (even the terminal). But when I press enter to confirm my choice of hiragana/katakana/kanji in kate, the characters just vanish as though they were never there
View 1 Replies View Relatedupgrading to9.10 I suddenly was unable use SCIM to switch language input methods.After searching around, I discovered that with Ubuntu 9.10 Ibus was being used in place of SCIM. That's all fine and good, but I can't get Ibus to work. Specifically, when I open the Ibus settings pane and add my desired languages, the settings aren't saved when I exit.So I tried switching back to SCIM. I changed my bashrc settings and set the keyboard input in language settings back to SCIM. No nice.Honestly, I just want to be able to swich language input methods--I don't care if I use SCIM or Ibus.
View 2 Replies View RelatedI use scim to input Chinese in Libreoffice-writer. It worked on one of my computers until a couple of days ago.
Normally to start scim I press Ctrl and the space bar at the same time. Then I use the input method Cangjie to input Chinese.
Now when I do so in Libreoffice-writer "English/European" appears in the scim panel. The other choice is "English/Keyboard". The choice of either doesn't enable me to input Chinese.
In all other software scim works as before.
The computer runs Debian sid. On another computer that runs Debian sid too I don't have the same problem. I have version 5 of Libreoffice on both computers.
I have what seems to be an incomplete or incompletely configured configuration of SCIM on my Netbook running Linux Mint(Gloria).To tell the truth, I am not even sure SCIM is the best choice, since I see claims (in LQ forums) that SCIM has been discontinued, and I cannot connect to the SCIM website.So what I want to do is get SOME Japanese Input Method working under this installation of Gloria, for now, I presume SCIM is the right choice for its front end. But I am certainly open to other suggestions.But I must shrink from the idea of installing language support for all languages, which is what Control Center>Language Support seems to threaten to do: it is only a Netbook, I can't afford to waste that much space.
what I see is the above Control Center option, and one other that must be relevant: ControlCenter>SCIM Input MethodSetup. But I don't see any documentation for this, and the menu item names are vaguely suggestive of their functions, not descriptive. So I am quite unsure which of them I need to use to get it working. Is it true, for example, that SCIM itself does not include the Input Methods? I have to download a Japanese IME from somewhere else? Which one? Is that what Control Center>Language Support will do? What DO they mean by "Front end module"? Why does SCIM only recognize an English keyboard layout and a "RAW CODE" (in IM Engine Global Setup)? have Greek and Russian layouts enabled on this machine, too.So now that you have a pretty good idea how disorienting I find the current situation, please point me to something that will clear up the confusion and possibly even give a list of step-by-step directions for getting a Japanese IME working on this machine.
After upgrading to firefox 4 rc, scim stop working. When ctrl+space pressed, nothing happened. (with latest scim package:
[Code].....
I can't input Japanese charactersn KWriteough the input works in all other applications as far as I know). Does anyone have an idea what the cause might be, or what I should be looking at?The point is not that can't see the characters (but e.g. gibberish instead), but that the characters that I type in the input bar are not transfered into KWrite upon commit.
View 1 Replies View RelatedHow do u add languages in 10.04? I went to System -> Pref -> Keyboard and added Korean and nothing happened for me found a few instructions but were way too dated
View 6 Replies View RelatedI was able to find a multitude of different keyboard fonts through preferences>keyboard>korean. However, the Korean keyboard is English only, and there's no Korean font. I would like to have access to the Korean font.
View 4 Replies View RelatedAfter I've upgraded to 10.04, the Korean text has become unreadable or very hard to read, on both KDE/Qt and Gnome/GTK apps. The text appears thiner and some characters/symbols are not fully rendered.
Has anyone encountered the same issue?
Update: In Dolphin and Nautilus the text is not rendered clearly, in Konsole is displayed just fine.
I have squid and dansguardian installed on my laptop. What seems to be happening is when I go from home (ethernet) to school (wireless), or from school to home, squid stops working (sites don't load - at least some don't). My fix was to shutdown squid with
Code:
sudo squid -k shutdown
delete the cache folder and then recreate it with
Code:
sudo squid -z
The problem is that this keeps happening and it is becoming a hassle to have to go through the 1-2 minute process every time I change my connection. I had squid and dansguardian set up and working for about a month on this installation and since Christmas on my old installation. This problem has only started recently. Occasionally, I would have to restart my computer because of DNS issues but I did not have to do so every time I changed connections.
I'd like to use Korean but have an English keyboard, an English environment, and need to input via this method. It appears that there is currently no way to use ibus and have the functionality of the "hangul-romaja" tables that SCIM had. For example, it used to be, using Hangul-romaja, that I could type the letters "g" and "a" to get the Korean "가" (ga).
Now, the moment I type "g" it automatically writes. Typing "g" and "a" produces: Am I just doing something wrong? Using Anthy in Japanese works just fine...typing "g" and "a" produces a "が" just like it's supposed to. Anyone out there know what to do to get Hangul-romaja (or something similar!) working in ibus? Am I stuck having to just guess at the Korean keyboard layout or memorize it somewhere? Might there already be an ibus-compatible solution for this?
I just installed the LXDE on minimal (netinstall) Lenny. On Iceweasel and chrome Korean email comes out garbled and unreadable.
View 2 Replies View RelatedThe Korean language works fine with firefox.
But when I want to type Korean on Internet explorer, it just shows question marks. (look at the picture)
How do I fix this?
I really need to use a website with IE and type Korean, ASAP!
I am new with CentOS. I've installed CentOS 5.4 and now trying to create a directory with Korean name but it displays incorrectly.Please help give me some instructions to solve this problem.I could not find out the solution by searching document from internet.
View 3 Replies View RelatedIn earlier versions of (K)ubuntu, I have used SCIM and the Yawerty input method to input Russian with a phonetic Latin keyboard.SCIM does not seem to work with Kubuntu 10.04, and UIM does not have (as far as I can tell from searching the repositories) Russian input.The Russian keyboard layout installable in Kubuntu is in the Russian version of the layout, rather than a phonetic Latin layout; I am not familiar with the normal Russian layout and I do not have stickers to stick on the keys to guide myself in using that layout.
View 2 Replies View RelatedIn my system around 73gb(pc-desktop) i have,1 primary partition(windows)-25gb, 1-extended partition(remaining gb) 3 logical partitions were there in (under) extended partition in one of the logical partition is d:drive. in my hard disk d: drive is -/dev/sda5
previosly i was fat -file system , (d:drive-/dev/sda5), i remember i changed the d: drive(d:drive-/dev/sda5) file system to ext4file system ,with following command using terminal
After doing(changing the file system)this one ,i couldnt see the d:drive data
By doing that
1q) Did i reformatted the partition? i think the new filesystem(ext4) has no knowledge of the data that was on it when it had a FAT filesystem.
2q) How to do undo operation,i tried to change the filesystem type to fat/ntfs in terminal using command --sudo mkfs -t FAT /dev/sda5.
Result:its showing text message-'mkfs.FAT: No such file or directory'(not in single quote)
I had very imp data in d:drive
I just loaded octave. I ran through a few examples of how to implement a script file. Everything works until I get to "plot". When I run the "plot" command I get the following.
octave:2> test1.m
error: can't perform indexing operations for <unknown type> type
sh: gnuplot: not found
Just to double check my work, I ran the following code:
y=[1 2 3];
plot(y);
I've been trying to use Scim because I was told it can type in various different languages, but so far I've had no luck on using it.anyone know how to configure itGUI or Terminal) to type in the language I would like it to (Korean)?
View 9 Replies View RelatedI installed Lucid several days ago, and have just noticed that SCIM no longer works. I need it for Japanese input, but cannot turn on Anthy. The manual is either nonexistent or extremely terse with a lot of presupposed knowledge.I've installed German, Russian and Spanish language support, along with CJK. I can't even get the SCIM tool to pop up now---except ONCE!Simply reinstalling using Synaptic overlays the existing problem(s), and does not resolve any issues.SCIM may be conflicting with the desktop Switcher applet? Actually, SCIM seems to be conflicting with other Gnome desktop shortcuts, as well
View 1 Replies View RelatedI have scim-hangul and all its dependencies installed. I can type hangul in Konsole and Konqueror, but it doesn't work in Firefox. How do I investigate this? What are some things I can try? Edit: I saw another thread on iBus and Korean. I am trying to install ibus-hangul. We'll see how that goes. Edit: Okay, I installed ibus-hangul. Then I ran im-chooser and selected ibus-hangul. From the preferences, I added "hangul". Finally, I logged out and back in and it is all working.
View 1 Replies View RelatedI have a keyboard layout built in Korean language, and when i installed openSUSE 11.3 by network installation i keep keyboard layout to Korean. But after installation can't write Korean but still see Korean font in Firefox, cuz i added its font on firefox configuration settings. What shall i do? I want installed in English but still need to use Korean fonts to write something.
View 2 Replies View Related