Re: One key stroke --> two code-points
- From: Simos Xenitellis <simos lists googlemail com>
- To: Javier SOLA <javier khmeros info>
- Cc: gnome-i18n gnome org, gtk-i18n-list gnome org, Jens Herden <jens khmeros info>, Bart Geesink <bart geesink org>
- Subject: Re: One key stroke --> two code-points
- Date: Mon, 09 Jun 2008 19:58:30 +0100
O/H Javier SOLA έγραψε:
Thanks Simos !!
Actually, we have had these additions for a while in X11.
Hi Javier,
Checking at
http://gitweb.freedesktop.org/?p=xorg/lib/libX11.git;a=tree;f=nls/en_US.UTF-8
does not show these lines at the end. It is possible that these compose
sequences were added as a patch to the distribution package.
We will do an issue for GTK+, and use the variable meanwhile.
What file is it in GTK+? I have not been able to find it.
In GTK+ (HEAD), the relevant file is
http://svn.gnome.org/viewvc/gtk%2B/trunk/gtk/gtkimcontextsimple.c?view=markup
However, your case of compose sequences is different from the existing
compose sequences, that result to a single codepoint (you require to
produce two codepoints).
Therefore, the type of support you are looking for is similar to compose
sequences that result to letter+diacritic mark. Several languages have
characters that no pre-composed letters exist, so the compose sequence
produces letter+diacritic marks (more than one codepoint). Such support
is missing, and there are already bug reports for them.
Bug 341341 – Compose mechanism in simple input method doesn't support
decomposed forms
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=341341
Bug 345254 – dead accents should at least produce combining characters
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=345254
There is a shortcut when trying to solve the above cases of compose
sequences, thus the solution I expect to be different from the Khmer
compose sequences.
Specifically, for the Latin compose sequences, such as (it's a made up
example)
<dead_acute> <t> : "t́" # LETTER T WITH ACUTE
one could convert to something like [ dead_acute, 't', 0].
We would put 0 for the resulting codepoint because we can deduce for
this category of compose sequences that the actual codepoints are 't'
and 'acute' (the resulting codepoints match the body of the compose
sequence).
However, for the case of Khmer, the compose sequences look independent
from the resulting code points. Therefore, a new table should be required.
To cut the story short, I have filed a bug report for this,
Bug 537457 – Support compose sequences that produce two+ codepoints
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=537457
Simos
Thanks,
Javier
Simos Xenitellis wrote
O/H Javier SOLA έγραψε:
Hi,
I am working on Khmer localization (KhmerOS project).
In Khmer, some of the basic vowels (which we include in the
keyboard) require two code-points, so one keystroke must generate
two code points.
It used to be that we could do the conversion in KBX by generating a
fictious code-point (Pablo Saratxaga explained this to us a few
years ago), which was later translated to two real code-points by
puting the conversion in the en-US locale file. I did work at the time.
But now this seems to have stopped working. Does anybody knows how
we can fix this?
These additions (pressing a single key and producing two codepoints),
are located at
/usr/share/X11/locale/en_US.UTF-8/Compose
The specific lines appear to be
# Khmer digraphs
# A keystroke has to generate several characters, so they are defined
# in this file
<U17fb> : "ុះ"
<U17fc> : "ុំ"
<U17fd> : "េះ"
<U17fe> : "ោះ"
<U17ff> : "ាំ"
GTK+ based applications duplicate the Compose file in the gtk+
library, and currently the version of the Compose file that exists in
gtk+ does not include those specific compose sequences.
I think these are a recent addition.
Technically, it is possible for gtk+ to include compose sequences
that produce more than one code points (requires small change in the
code), however these recent Khmer digraphs are the only compose
sequences using the facility now.
To cut the long story short, you can bypass for now the GTK+ version
of the Compose file and use the Compose file that comes with X.Org
(shown above) by setting the environment variable GTK_IM_MODULE to
"xim".
This should not have adverse effect to the OLPC software.
It is important that if other keyboard layouts as well require
compose sequences that produce
two or more codepoints (such as Serbian), to add them to the XOrg
Compose file. In the next iteration of update of the GTK+, all these
compose sequences can make it in.
Simos
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