On Windows, you can always use Keyman and Keyman Developer to create very flexible input methods that work across pretty much any app, FWIW. Both of these are available free these days at least in basic editions (www.keyman.com/desktop<http://www.keyman.com/desktop> and www.keyman.com/developer<http://www.keyman.com/developer>). Just providing another alternative.
Marc
-----Original Message-----
From: Unicode [mailto:unicode-bounces_at_unicode.org] On Behalf Of Eli Zaretskii
Sent: Friday, 17 July 2015 4:58 PM
To: Richard Wordingham
Cc: unicode_at_unicode.org<mailto:unicode_at_unicode.org>
Subject: Re: Input methods at the age of Unicode
Date: Thu, 16 Jul 2015 23:59:24 +0100
From: Richard Wordingham <richard.wordingham_at_ntlworld.com<mailto:richard.wordingham_at_ntlworld.com>>
On Thu, 16 Jul 2015 19:33:34 +0300
Eli Zaretskii <eliz_at_gnu.org<mailto:eliz_at_gnu.org>> wrote:
One needs a good UTF-8 text editor as well.
Emacs is one possibility, of course.
If you're prepared to cut and paste, it's easy to extend it own
keyboards.
FWIW, I do that a lot, because the number of convenient input methods in Emacs far outnumbers what I have on MS-Windows. For example, if I have to type Russian with no Russian keyboard available, the cyrillic-translit input method is a life savior.
Received on Fri Jul 17 2015 - 03:03:24 CDT
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