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A Chinese keyboard in Shek Tong Tsui Municipal Services Building, Hong Kong with Cangjie hints printed on the lower-left corners of the keys. (Printed on the lower-right and upper-right corners are Dayi hints and Zhuyin symbols respectively.) Cangjie is the first Chinese input method to use the QWERTY keyboard.
Simplified Cangjie, known as Quick (Chinese: 速成或簡易) is a stroke based [1] keyboard input method based on the Cangjie IME (Chinese: 倉頡輸入法) but simplified with select lists. Unlike full Cangjie, the user enters only the first and last keystrokes used in the Cangjie system, and then chooses the desired character from a list of ...
[11] Due to these complexities, there is no "standard" method. In mainland China, pinyin methods such as Sogou Pinyin and Google Pinyin are the most popular. In Taiwan, use of Cangjie, Dayi, Boshiamy, and bopomofo predominate; and in Hong Kong and Macau, the Cangjie is most often taught in schools, while a few schools teach CKC Chinese Input ...
Pinyin input is part of the standard installation of macOS. With version 10.5.8 and before, the international standard term ITABC was used, but was changed to "Pinyin - Simplified" in Mac OS X 10.6. Fit smart Pinyin is an alternative to the standard OS X Chinese input method.
There are facilities available on Microsoft Windows, Office and the web, which will enable us to input almost all of these Chinese auxiliary characters, ranging from the input of punctuation marks in general Chinese input methods, to inputting diacritical pinyin with soft keyboards, to inputting strokes and radicals from the Unicode website and ...
The Wubi 98 keyboard layout The Wubi 86 keyboard layout (more common) A QWERTY keyboard with Wubi 86 components. The Wubizixing input method (simplified Chinese: 五笔字型输入法; traditional Chinese: 五筆字型輸入法; pinyin: wǔbǐ zìxíng shūrùfǎ; lit. 'five-stroke character model input method'), often abbreviated to simply Wubi or Wubi Xing, [1] is a Chinese character input ...
Microsoft Pinyin IME (Chinese: 微软拼音输入法; pinyin: wēiruǎn pīnyīn shūrùfǎ) is the pinyin input method implementation developed by Microsoft and Harbin Institute of Technology. It is bundled with Microsoft Windows and Chinese editions of Microsoft Office .
The following are rules of the Dayi input method: [1] Input is with accordance to Chinese writing stroke order: "top first, then bottom", "left first, then right". For characters made of more than 4 symbols, enter the first three and the last symbol. For instance, "壽" (士乛工口手舟) is represented by just 4 symbols: 士乛工舟 (FBR.).