|
|||||||||||
|
Re: Fwd: [i18n] Input Method and Fonts improvements for Gutsy
From: Arne Goetje <arne.goetje(at)canonical.com>
Date: Tue Aug 07 2007 - 04:12:32 EDT
Christian Perrier wrote:
>> Hi, >> I think it would be good to discuss this with Debian folks at well to >> share their expertise and I think these issues should be addressed for >> lenny as well. > > And, given that this highly involves packages beings installed by > default, this should be discussed with the D-I team as such default > installations should be handled by tasksel in Debian. > > (please note that Ubuntu does not use tasksel and, therefore, > solutions suitable for Ubuntu will, there, not be suitable for Debian > and vice-versa) > >> Regards, >> Daniel > > So, original message by Arne Goetje, forwarded by Daniel Glassey: > >> ---------- Forwarded message ---------- >> From: Arne Goetje > Dear all, > > I have taken a first look at the current font and input method situation > in Gutsy (Tribe 3 Live CD and up to date installation on HDD) and have a > few suggestions to make. > > 1. Input Method (SCIM): > Both Live CD and default installation come with the SCIM package > installed, however it is not properly set up, so that the user actually > cannot use it. > SCIM depends on some environment variables and the SCIM demon started in > the background. There is a nice tool, called im-switch, which takes care > of this. > The purpose of im-switch is to give the user a simple frontend to choose > which input method program (s)he wants to use. For most users with > non-Latin based alphabets, this should be SCIM, as it clearly supports > most languages and scripts. However, some Asian users might prefer a > different application, like IIIMF or gcin (especially in Taiwan). > im-switch will take a parameter, whether or not it should do the setting > system wide or in the user scope only, and the name of the input method > framework. > > So, for making SCIM the system wide default, the following should be > done on the Live CD and in the default installation: > 1. install and configure scim and its modules > >> I think that this should be done by default when installs are done for >> non european languages, at least those that are supported by SCIM >> (CJK? Indic languages? Other Asian languages? Cyrillic?) > > > 2. install im-switch > >> Ditto > > > 3. run as root: > im-switch -s scim > After a relogin, the user can toggle SCIM on/off by pressing CRTL+SPACE. > >> "im-switch -s scim" should be done once on the installed system, or at >> every boot? only once at install time. And only if you want to use SCIM as default IM application... > 2. SCIM modules: >> Could go in the -desktop tasks for Indic and Cyrillic langs > > > I highly recommend, that we put the following packages and their > dependencies into the Live CD and the default installation to make it > become more useful: > * scim-anthy or scim-prime: Japanese input methods, scim-prime is a > dictionary based IM, which has a great advantage over anthy. Although > both are widely used in Japan. > >> Ditto for japanese-desktop > > > * scim-chewing: Traditional Chinese phonetic IM, widely used in Taiwan > >> ditto for chinese-t-desktop (already done, indeed) > > * scim-pinyin: Simplified and Traditional Chinese Pinyin IM, widely > used in China and by foreigners in Taiwan. ;) > >> ditto for chinese-t-desktop and chinese-s-desktop > > * scim-hangul: As the name says it - Korean. > >> ditto for korean-desktop > > * scim-tables-zh: additional table based IMs for Simplified and > Traditional Chinese, many of them are popular in China, Hong Kong and > Taiwan. > >> ditto for chinese-t-desktop and chinese-s-desktop > > > * scim-thai: well, Thai. :) > >> ditto for thai-desktop > > * scim-m17n: bridge to the m17n library, which adds a lot of additional > IMs, including Latin based ones for the European languages with > diacritics. (not everyone likes to fiddle with XKB settings. ;) ) > >> hmmm, seeing this makes me think that, after all, scim could be >> installed by default on all desktop installs, and scim-m17n added to >> *-desktop tasks for Latin-based languages.
To all above comments from Christian:
So, the "desktop" task, without SCIM, for those users who are happy with their localized desktop, and "international-desktop" for those users, who need global IMs and fonts on their systems. > The following packages may NOT be installed: >> All these things seem more Ubuntu-specific (related to the Ubuntu >> liveCD which, afaik, never made its way back into Debian...) > >> I leave the remaining of the mail (as I added -boot to the CC list) >> but don't have much comments. It is full of good ideas, which could >> also benefit the installer. > > The idea with the language selector handling the fontconfig > configuration is nice, however, it needs some tweaking: > * more languages: I will add more config files for more locales; needs > some testing and probably some community feedback. > * Question: how to handle those config files which come with the font > packages? Font preference handling should be done by language selector, > while font specific options can remain the the config files installed by > the font packages? If that's the case, we need to check all the font > packages and tweak those where it's not the case. > > b) Font packages: > I see a problem: space on the Live CD is a bit "restricted"... but some > font packages come with multiple fonts inside and install them all, even > if we don't need them. This wastes precious space. > I'm still trying to get an overview about which fonts cover which > Unicode ranges and which fonts should be taken into account for the > three Alias fonts "sans-serif", "serif" and "monospace". > Bottom line: Some font packages come with fonts we don't need for this > purpose. Question: how to handle this? > > Option 1: We craft a seperate package, just for the Live CD and put > selected fonts from the other font packages together, just for this > single purpose. > Caveat: might conflict with the other font packages (duplicate fonts > files), should probably not be used on the default installation on the > users' harddisks. > > Option 2: We split the font packages into 2: a "base" package with the > fonts we need for the Live CD and an "extra" package, where the rest of > the fonts are in. > Caveat: it's not always easy to draw the line which font should be in > base and which ones in extra. Users might get confused. > > I would probably prefer option 1... less work, if we can restrict it to > the Live CD only. > > c) rendering issue in Chinese locale environment: > This might be a bug in my chinese font package, I will take care of this > and provide a new package for Gutsy. > > 4. Improvements for Gutsy+1 > I expect that we don't have enough time to implement these improvements > into Gutsy, therefor we should probably postpone them for the next release: > a) Language selector: > It would be useful, if the user could have an Advanced button in the > language selector, where (s)he can adjust his/her preferred fonts and > translation order. Just like you have a list of available fonts and you > move them up or down according to your own preference. And the same > should be possible for translations: > > There are users who live in a foreign country and whose language ability > is not good enough to use that country's locale settings, but use their > native language instead. However, they need to use their host country's > writing system. > > Take me as example: I'm from Germany, but live in Taiwan. On my computer > I prefer en_US as my default locale, but need to display Chinese > characters probably. Therefor I prefer the Arphic font over the Baekmuk > or Kochi fonts. > Another foreigner living in Japan, might have the same issue but prefers > the Kochi font over the Arphic and Baekmuk ones. > > There are also users who depend on translations, but sometimes meet the > situation, that a translation is not available in their native language. > The default fallback is English. But maybe that user is not very good in > understanding English and prefers a different fallback language, or set > of languages: For example, a Taiwanese user who uses Traditional > Chinese, might prefer Simplified Chinese and then Japanese as fallback > and not English. > > So: have a Advanced button in the language selector, which pops up a new > window with two Tabs: one for setting the preferred fonts and one for > translation fallbacks. > > b) CJK fonts: > This topic really is... erm... difficult. > For the Arphic fonts (and probably also a Heiti (sans-serif, like DejaVu > Sans) and Yuanti (rounded, like Kochi Gothic) font) I have the following > in mind: > The problem is, that many characters share the same codepoint in > Unicode, but have a different shape (number of strokes and stroke order) > in the different CJK regions (China, Hong Kong / Macao, Taiwan, Japan, > Korea). This is one of the main reasons why users in these regions > prefer different fonts. > My approach would be to put all character shape variants into a single > TTC (TrueType Collection) and use a different glyph ID to Unicode > codepoint mapping for each "virtual font". > Instead of having 5 separate TTF files, each about 25MB in size, we > would end up with only one TTC file (about 30 MB in size), which > produces 5 "virtual fonts". Saves a lot of space. ;) > > (If you need more details about this technology, I can elaborate about > it in a follow up mail) > > Caveat: QT3 does not support TTC fonts. GTK2 however has no problem with > it. QT4 >= 4.3 is also able to use them. > So, I basically wait until KDE4 is released and adopted into Ubuntu. > Otherwise KDE users can't use the TTC fonts. > > That's it for the moment, if you have some opinion about one of these > issues, please speak up. :) > > Cheers > Arne >> >>
Cheers
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
iD8DBQFGuClwbp/QbmhdHowRAshzAJ0VQn6tWXP1fPvOAm6GhpXhp506GwCcDUYn
S9mR1tMGzsPZhf1dq1cLgH8=
-- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-boot-REQUEST@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmaster@lists.debian.orgReceived on Tue Aug 7 04:29:46 2007 This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Thu Aug 09 2007 - 18:05:02 EDT |
||||||||||
|
|||||||||||