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Is there a way to input Chinese in fcitx?
However, when I try to involk the chinese input method using ctrl+space, it won’t work. I have set my enviroment language to export LANG=zh_CN.UTF-8, it still wont work.
How does fcitx work to return all candidates at once?
For input methods in Fcitx, we require input method to return all the candidate at once. Some other framework maybe just return by page, fcitx didn’t prevent that, but return all candidate at once have some obvious benefit.
Which is the default input method in fcitx?
Found 2 enabled input methods: fcitx-keyboard-cn sunpinyin 2. Default input methods: You have a keyboard input method “fcitx-keyboard-cn” correctly added as your default input method.
Why is there no backward compatibility in fcitx?
There’re times that fcitx ignored some kinds of backward compatibility (4.0 -> 4.1 skin change, 3.6 -> 4.0 data format and configuration layout change), but since 4.2 we finally reach a level that we don’t have much limitation, and things are well organized, there is no more excuse can be taken for not keep the backward compatibility.
How to use fcitx in GNOME Control Center?
From the menu choose fcitx. Reboot or log out the user. When done you will be able to use the input. To make fcitx work inside GNOME environment you will need to remove all the input sources from gnome-control-center, clear all the hotkeys for input methods and issue the following command to disable iBus integration:
Why is my fcitx input method not working?
After restart, it still won’t work, and it seems that using fcitx-diagnose still have such errors. It’s a long output, so I leave it to the end. I tried to using im-config suggest in this post, it wont work.
How to change to Chinese input in Debian?
Change over to chinese input with -Shift Select an alternate chinese character with -N To edit and enter Pinyin, add all vowels into the character palette: áéíóúàèìòùāēĩōūăĕĭŏŭǚ The file README.Debian in /usr/share/doc/scim contains the necessary documentation. To convert pinyin into Chinese, also add scim-pinyin.