diff --git a/docs/index.xml b/docs/index.xml index e701a8e1..e14a801c 100644 --- a/docs/index.xml +++ b/docs/index.xml @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -Documentation on ibus-typing-booster/docs/Recent content in Documentation on ibus-typing-boosterHugo -- gohugo.ioen-usThu, 30 Sep 2021 00:00:00 +0000User Documentation 👩/docs/user/Thu, 30 Sep 2021 00:00:00 +0000/docs/user/Contents Installing ibus-typing-booster Adding ibus-typing-booster to your desktop When using the Gnome3 desktop When using older Gnome3 desktops like in Ubuntu 21.04 When using other desktops than Gnome3 When using the Unity desktop on Ubuntu 16.04 Setup Basic setup for your language More advanced options Enable suggestions by a key Use inline completion Inline completion is hard to use on Wayland Spellchecking Toggle input mode on/off (Direct Input Mode) Reopening preëdits Disabling in terminals Autosettings Simulate the behaviour of ibus-m17n Key and Mouse bindings The “AltGr” key Table of default key bindings Mouse bindings Customizing key bindings Customizing key bindings using digits ⚠️ Caveat: Key bindings can only work when there is input focus Multilingual input Example using Hindi and English at the same time Example using Spanish and English at the same time Compose support (About dead keys and the Compose key) “Dead keys” The “Compose” key Customizing compose sequences Special “Compose” features in Typing Booster Why Typing Booster has its own “Compose” implementation Automatically add “missing” dead key sequences Fallbacks for “missing” keypad sequences How undefined sequences are handled Show possible completions of compose sequences A peculiarity of Gnome3 and compose completions Optional colour for the compose preëdit Unicode symbols and emoji predictions Emoji input Emoji input fuzzy matching Emoji input using multiple keywords Looking up related emoji Multilingual emoji input Emoji input using German and English Emoji input using Hindi and English Emoji input using Japanese Emoji input using Japanese or Chinese phonetics Unicode symbol input Unicode code point input Quickly toggling emoji mode on and off Emoji picker Emoji fonts Historic: Showing emoji in colour The Gnome on-screen keyboard, enabling and using it Using NLTK to find related words Speech recognition 0 Installing ibus-typing-booster For most distributions, there are binary packages available already.Developer Documentation 👩‍🔧/docs/dev/Sat, 28 Aug 2021 00:00:00 +0000/docs/dev/Ibus-typing-booser is open source and licensed under the GPL version 3. +Documentation on ibus-typing-booster/docs/Recent content in Documentation on ibus-typing-boosterHugo -- gohugo.ioen-usThu, 30 Sep 2021 00:00:00 +0000User Documentation 👩/docs/user/Thu, 30 Sep 2021 00:00:00 +0000/docs/user/Contents Installing ibus-typing-booster Adding ibus-typing-booster to your desktop When using the Gnome3 desktop When using older Gnome3 desktops like in Ubuntu 21.04 When using other desktops than Gnome3 When using the Unity desktop on Ubuntu 16.04 Setup Basic setup for your language More advanced options Enable suggestions by a key Use inline completion Inline completion is hard to use on Wayland Spellchecking Toggle input mode on/off (Direct Input Mode) Reopening preëdits Disabling in terminals Autosettings Forcing an IBus keymap Simulate the behaviour of ibus-m17n Key and Mouse bindings The “AltGr” key Table of default key bindings Mouse bindings Customizing key bindings Customizing key bindings using digits ⚠️ Caveat: Key bindings can only work when there is input focus Multilingual input Example using Hindi and English at the same time Example using Spanish and English at the same time Compose support (About dead keys and the Compose key) “Dead keys” The “Compose” key Customizing compose sequences Special “Compose” features in Typing Booster Why Typing Booster has its own “Compose” implementation Automatically add “missing” dead key sequences Fallbacks for “missing” keypad sequences How undefined sequences are handled Show possible completions of compose sequences A peculiarity of Gnome3 and compose completions Optional colour for the compose preëdit Unicode symbols and emoji predictions Emoji input Emoji input fuzzy matching Emoji input using multiple keywords Looking up related emoji Multilingual emoji input Emoji input using German and English Emoji input using Hindi and English Emoji input using Japanese Emoji input using Japanese or Chinese phonetics Unicode symbol input Unicode code point input Quickly toggling emoji mode on and off Emoji picker Emoji fonts Historic: Showing emoji in colour The Gnome on-screen keyboard, enabling and using it Using NLTK to find related words Speech recognition 0 Installing ibus-typing-booster For most distributions, there are binary packages available already.Developer Documentation 👩‍🔧/docs/dev/Sat, 28 Aug 2021 00:00:00 +0000/docs/dev/Ibus-typing-booser is open source and licensed under the GPL version 3. Reporting bugs 🐞 You can report bugs and suggest improvements in the github issue tracker: https://github.com/mike-fabian/ibus-typing-booster/issues Translation 🇺🇳 You can contribute translations for ibus-typing-booster using the online translation platform weblate: https://translate.fedoraproject.org/projects/ibus-typing-booster/. If you cannot use weblate, you can also create a pull request for new or updated translations. diff --git a/docs/user/index.html b/docs/user/index.html index b3261853..dfb44a8d 100644 --- a/docs/user/index.html +++ b/docs/user/index.html @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ -ibus-typing-booster

User Documentation 👩

Contents

  1. Installing ibus-typing-booster
  2. Adding ibus-typing-booster to your desktop
  3. Setup
  4. Key and Mouse bindings
  5. Multilingual input
  6. Compose support (About dead keys and the Compose key)
  7. Unicode symbols and emoji predictions
  8. The Gnome on-screen keyboard, enabling and using it
  9. Using NLTK to find related words
  10. Speech recognition

0

Installing ibus-typing-booster

For most distributions, there are binary packages available already. Here are some examples for common distributions how you can install ibus-typing-booster (and optionally emoji-picker) using package managers on the command line:

  • Fedora:
    • sudo dnf install ibus-typing-booster
    • sudo dnf install emoji-picker (optional)
  • Debian, Ubuntu:
    • sudo apt-get install ibus-typing-booster (includes emoji-picker already! 😁)
  • openSUSE:
    • sudo zypper install ibus-typing-booster (includes emoji-picker already! 😁)

If your distribution has no binary packages or you are want to have @@ -387,7 +387,7 @@ google-chrome. For these browsers, GNOME_ACCESSIBILITY=1 has to be in the environment to make it work. Qt5 programs on Wayland need QT_LINUX_ACCESSIBILITY_ALWAYS_ON=1 and Qt4 programs on Wayland need -QT_ACCESSIBILITY=1.

2_3

Simulate the behaviour of ibus-m17n