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aa - Afar
ab - Abkhazian
abs - Ambonese Malay
ace - Achinese
ady - Adyghe
ady-cyrl - Adyghe (Cyrillic script)
aeb - Tunisian Arabic
aeb-arab - Tunisian Arabic (Arabic script)
aeb-latn - Tunisian Arabic (Latin script)
af - Afrikaans
ak - Akan
aln - Gheg Albanian
alt - Southern Altai
am - Amharic
ami - Amis
an - Aragonese
ang - Old English
anp - Angika
ar - Arabic
arc - Aramaic
arn - Mapuche
arq - Algerian Arabic
ary - Moroccan Arabic
arz - Egyptian Arabic
as - Assamese
ase - American Sign Language
ast - Asturian
atj - Atikamekw
av - Avaric
avk - Kotava
awa - Awadhi
ay - Aymara
az - Azerbaijani
azb - South Azerbaijani
ba - Bashkir
ban - Balinese
bar - Bavarian
bbc - Batak Toba
bbc-latn - Batak Toba (Latin script)
bcc - Southern Balochi
bcl - Central Bikol
be - Belarusian
be-tarask - Belarusian (Taraškievica orthography)
bg - Bulgarian
bgn - Western Balochi
bh - Bhojpuri
bho - Bhojpuri
bi - Bislama
bjn - Banjar
bm - Bambara
bn - Bangla
bo - Tibetan
bpy - Bishnupriya
bqi - Bakhtiari
br - Breton
brh - Brahui
bs - Bosnian
btm - Batak Mandailing
bto - Iriga Bicolano
bug - Buginese
bxr - Russia Buriat
ca - Catalan
cbk-zam - Chavacano
cdo - Min Dong Chinese
ce - Chechen
ceb - Cebuano
ch - Chamorro
cho - Choctaw
chr - Cherokee
chy - Cheyenne
ckb - Central Kurdish
co - Corsican
cps - Capiznon
cr - Cree
crh - Crimean Turkish
crh-cyrl - Crimean Tatar (Cyrillic script)
crh-latn - Crimean Tatar (Latin script)
cs - Czech
csb - Kashubian
cu - Church Slavic
cv - Chuvash
cy - Welsh
da - Danish
de - German
de-at - Austrian German
de-ch - Swiss High German
de-formal - German (formal address)
din - Dinka
diq - Zazaki
dsb - Lower Sorbian
dtp - Central Dusun
dty - Doteli
dv - Divehi
dz - Dzongkha
ee - Ewe
egl - Emilian
el - Greek
eml - Emiliano-Romagnolo
en - English
en-ca - Canadian English
en-gb - British English
eo - Esperanto
es - Spanish
es-419 - Latin American Spanish
es-formal - español (formal)
et - Estonian
eu - Basque
ext - Extremaduran
fa - Persian
ff - Fulah
fi - Finnish
fit - Tornedalen Finnish
fj - Fijian
fo - Faroese
fr - French
frc - Cajun French
frp - Arpitan
frr - Northern Frisian
fur - Friulian
fy - Western Frisian
ga - Irish
gag - Gagauz
gan - Gan Chinese
gan-hans - Gan (Simplified)
gan-hant - Gan (Traditional)
gcr - Guianan Creole
gd - Scottish Gaelic
gl - Galician
glk - Gilaki
gn - Guarani
gom - Goan Konkani
gom-deva - Goan Konkani (Devanagari script)
gom-latn - Goan Konkani (Latin script)
gor - Gorontalo
got - Gothic
grc - Ancient Greek
gsw - Swiss German
gu - Gujarati
gv - Manx
ha - Hausa
hak - Hakka Chinese
haw - Hawaiian
he - Hebrew
hi - Hindi
hif - Fiji Hindi
hif-latn - Fiji Hindi (Latin script)
hil - Hiligaynon
ho - Hiri Motu
hr - Croatian
hrx - Hunsrik
hsb - Upper Sorbian
ht - Haitian Creole
hu - Hungarian
hu-formal - magyar (formal)
hy - Armenian
hyw - Western Armenian
hz - Herero
ia - Interlingua
id - Indonesian
ie - Interlingue
ig - Igbo
ii - Sichuan Yi
ik - Inupiaq
ike-cans - Eastern Canadian (Aboriginal syllabics)
ike-latn - Eastern Canadian (Latin script)
ilo - Iloko
inh - Ingush
io - Ido
is - Icelandic
it - Italian
iu - Inuktitut
ja - Japanese
jam - Jamaican Creole English
jbo - Lojban
jut - Jutish
jv - Javanese
ka - Georgian
kaa - Kara-Kalpak
kab - Kabyle
kbd - Kabardian
kbd-cyrl - Kabardian (Cyrillic script)
kbp - Kabiye
kg - Kongo
khw - Khowar
ki - Kikuyu
kiu - Kirmanjki
kj - Kuanyama
kjp - Eastern Pwo
kk - Kazakh
kk-arab - Kazakh (Arabic script)
kk-cn - Kazakh (China)
kk-cyrl - Kazakh (Cyrillic script)
kk-kz - Kazakh (Kazakhstan)
kk-latn - Kazakh (Latin script)
kk-tr - Kazakh (Turkey)
kl - Kalaallisut
km - Khmer
kn - Kannada
ko - Korean
ko-kp - Korean (North Korea)
koi - Komi-Permyak
kr - Kanuri
krc - Karachay-Balkar
kri - Krio
krj - Kinaray-a
krl - Karelian
ks - Kashmiri
ks-arab - Kashmiri (Arabic script)
ks-deva - Kashmiri (Devanagari script)
ksh - Colognian
ku - Kurdish
ku-arab - Kurdish (Arabic script)
ku-latn - Kurdish (Latin script)
kum - Kumyk
kv - Komi
kw - Cornish
ky - Kyrgyz
la - Latin
lad - Ladino
lb - Luxembourgish
lbe - Lak
lez - Lezghian
lfn - Lingua Franca Nova
lg - Ganda
li - Limburgish
lij - Ligurian
liv - Livonian
lki - Laki
lld - Ladin
lmo - Lombard
ln - Lingala
lo - Lao
loz - Lozi
lrc - Northern Luri
lt - Lithuanian
ltg - Latgalian
lus - Mizo
luz - Southern Luri
lv - Latvian
lzh - Literary Chinese
lzz - Laz
mai - Maithili
map-bms - Basa Banyumasan
mdf - Moksha
mg - Malagasy
mh - Marshallese
mhr - Eastern Mari
mi - Maori
min - Minangkabau
mk - Macedonian
ml - Malayalam
mn - Mongolian
mni - Manipuri
mnw - Mon
mo - Moldovan
mr - Marathi
mrj - Western Mari
ms - Malay
mt - Maltese
mus - Muscogee
mwl - Mirandese
my - Burmese
myv - Erzya
mzn - Mazanderani
na - Nauru
nah - Nāhuatl
nan - Min Nan Chinese
nap - Neapolitan
nb - Norwegian Bokmål
nds - Low German
nds-nl - Low Saxon
ne - Nepali
new - Newari
ng - Ndonga
niu - Niuean
nl - Dutch
nl-informal - Nederlands (informeel)
nn - Norwegian Nynorsk
no - Norwegian
nov - Novial
nqo - N’Ko
nrm - Norman
nso - Northern Sotho
nv - Navajo
ny - Nyanja
nys - Nyungar
oc - Occitan
olo - Livvi-Karelian
om - Oromo
or - Odia
os - Ossetic
pa - Punjabi
pag - Pangasinan
pam - Pampanga
pap - Papiamento
pcd - Picard
pdc - Pennsylvania German
pdt - Plautdietsch
pfl - Palatine German
pi - Pali
pih - Norfuk / Pitkern
pl - Polish
pms - Piedmontese
pnb - Western Punjabi
pnt - Pontic
prg - Prussian
ps - Pashto
pt - Portuguese
pt-br - Brazilian Portuguese
qu - Quechua
qug - Chimborazo Highland Quichua
rgn - Romagnol
rif - Riffian
rm - Romansh
rmy - Vlax Romani
rn - Rundi
ro - Romanian
roa-tara - Tarantino
ru - Russian
rue - Rusyn
rup - Aromanian
ruq - Megleno-Romanian
ruq-cyrl - Megleno-Romanian (Cyrillic script)
ruq-latn - Megleno-Romanian (Latin script)
rw - Kinyarwanda
sa - Sanskrit
sah - Sakha
sat - Santali
sc - Sardinian
scn - Sicilian
sco - Scots
sd - Sindhi
sdc - Sassarese Sardinian
sdh - Southern Kurdish
se - Northern Sami
sei - Seri
ses - Koyraboro Senni
sg - Sango
sgs - Samogitian
sh - Serbo-Croatian
shi - Tachelhit
shi-latn - Tachelhit (Latin script)
shi-tfng - Tachelhit (Tifinagh script)
shn - Shan
shy-latn - Shawiya (Latin script)
si - Sinhala
simple - Simple English
sk - Slovak
skr - Saraiki
skr-arab - Saraiki (Arabic script)
sl - Slovenian
sli - Lower Silesian
sm - Samoan
sma - Southern Sami
smn - Inari Sami
sn - Shona
so - Somali
sq - Albanian
sr - Serbian
sr-ec - Serbian (Cyrillic script)
sr-el - Serbian (Latin script)
srn - Sranan Tongo
ss - Swati
st - Southern Sotho
stq - Saterland Frisian
sty - себертатар
su - Sundanese
sv - Swedish
sw - Swahili
szl - Silesian
szy - Sakizaya
ta - Tamil
tay - Tayal
tcy - Tulu
te - Telugu
tet - Tetum
tg - Tajik
tg-cyrl - Tajik (Cyrillic script)
tg-latn - Tajik (Latin script)
th - Thai
ti - Tigrinya
tk - Turkmen
tl - Tagalog
tly - Talysh
tn - Tswana
to - Tongan
tpi - Tok Pisin
tr - Turkish
tru - Turoyo
trv - Taroko
ts - Tsonga
tt - Tatar
tt-cyrl - Tatar (Cyrillic script)
tt-latn - Tatar (Latin script)
tum - Tumbuka
tw - Twi
ty - Tahitian
tyv - Tuvinian
tzm - Central Atlas Tamazight
udm - Udmurt
ug - Uyghur
ug-arab - Uyghur (Arabic script)
ug-latn - Uyghur (Latin script)
uk - Ukrainian
ur - Urdu
uz - Uzbek
uz-cyrl - Uzbek (Cyrillic script)
uz-latn - Uzbek (Latin script)
ve - Venda
vec - Venetian
vep - Veps
vi - Vietnamese
vls - West Flemish
vmf - Main-Franconian
vo - Volapük
vot - Votic
vro - Võro
wa - Walloon
war - Waray
wo - Wolof
wuu - Wu Chinese
xal - Kalmyk
xh - Xhosa
xmf - Mingrelian
xsy - Saisiyat
yi - Yiddish
yo - Yoruba
yue - Cantonese
za - Zhuang
zea - Zeelandic
zgh - Standard Moroccan Tamazight
zh - Chinese
zh-cn - Chinese (China)
zh-hans - Simplified Chinese
zh-hant - Traditional Chinese
zh-hk - Chinese (Hong Kong)
zh-mo - Chinese (Macau)
zh-my - Chinese (Malaysia)
zh-sg - Chinese (Singapore)
zh-tw - Chinese (Taiwan)
zu - Zulu
qqq - Message documentation
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<languages/> When you want to complain about input method cannot work correctly, please read this first. Since 4.2.7, fcitx provides a command called fcitx-diagnose, it will try to detect some common problem and give some advice. [[Special:MyLanguage/Hall of Shame for Linux IME Support|Hall of Shame for Linux IME Support]] == When use Ctrl + Space, Fcitx cannot be triggered on == Check the application you want to type into. === Wayland === See [[Special:MyLanguage/Using Fcitx 5 on Wayland|Using Fcitx 5 on Wayland]]. === Only one specific app has problem? === * The most possible reason for this is Ctrl+Space occupied by some hotkey, please change to another trigger key and try again. This usually happens in some editor, since many ide use Ctrl+Space as default key binding for Completion. === All Gtk Apps have problem? === * Please open a traditional Gtk App (traditional Gtk App means, it cannot be Firefox, Libreoffice, which only use Gtk as a UI style). Gedit is a good choice. Right click at the input box, there will be a menu named "Input Method", please make sure there is "Fcitx" in it and being choosed. * If there is "Fcitx", but it still not works. Please try to restart Fcitx, if it will works at this time, please check your DBus settings, or make Fcitx start later. You can read [[Special:MyLanguage/Configure (Other)|Configure (Other)]] if you're using a custom startup script. * If there is Fcitx but not being choosed by default, and please select it and you can immediately try again in this app. If not works, please read the entry above. For permanent fix (To use Fcitx by default), please read Configure part in [[Special:MyLanguage/Install And Configure|Install And Configure]]. * If there is no Fcitx, you should check your install first. Usually, the package name contains fcitx and gtk. If you [[Special:MyLanguage/Compile from source|compile fcitx from source]], please make sure you have enable GTK{2,3}_IM_MODULE option. If you're sure about this, please read [[Special:MyLanguage/Input method related environment variables|Input method related environment variables]] for how to update some cached file for gtk. * If you are using Ubuntu and upgrade to 12.04 recently, or something werid happens to your system (Due to packager careless, or buggy package manager which can not do upgrade in correct order, for example, [https://bugs.archlinux.org/task/32764 pacman]), you might notice that gtk.immodules related files doesn't generate correctly during upgrade. Try uninstall {{package ubuntu|fcitx-frontend-gtk2}}, {{package ubuntu|fcitx-frontend-gtk3}} or coressponding package on your system and re-install them to trigger the file generate. Then recheck the input method menu to see whether it have "Fcitx" in the menu or not. === All Qt Apps have problem? === * Run qtconfig (might have different name on your distribution, it might be qtconfig-qt4), and go to the third tab, make sure fcitx is in the "Default Input Method" combo-box. If not, please check your install. * Above solution can also applies if you want use XIM, but still we highly recommend you to use im module. See Also [[Special:MyLanguage/Input method related environment variables|Input method related environment variables]]. ==== Telegram desktop ==== Some distribution enables Qt6 for telegram desktop. Just make sure you have the Qt6 im module (For fcitx4, it's fcitx-qt6 on archlinux). === Chromium or any other chromium based browser (E.g. Microsoft Edge) === For Chromium running under X11, if you are using startx to start your graphical user interface, you may hit [https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/xorg/app/xinit/-/issues/9 an issue] in startx that unset the DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS, which prevent chromium based browser from using dbus correctly. To mitigate this, you may: 1. either export DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS by yourself in your ~/.xinitrc (or simply change to use ~/.xsession if you are using debian based system). 2. or use a display manager like sddm, gdm, lightdm instead of startx. For Chromium that runs natively under wayland, the only native wayland input method protocol it supports is text-input-v1, which is only supported by weston. Alternatively, it can also use Gtk4's im module, you can use following flag (---enable-features=UseOzonePlatform --ozone-platform=wayland --gtk-version=4) to make it use Gtk im module, but it doesn't fully work in terms of popup window position unless you are using kimpanel + GNOME. === Is it Java, Xterm, wine, or some other non-Gtk/Qt Application? === There are also some very rare case, that you're using a embedded linux or mini-linux distro, in which you must use XIM, the X server might missing some locale file. The file is usually needed to be under /usr/share/X11/locale/. And When you must use XIM, please make sure, your locale '''must NOT''' be C or POSIX and need to be a valid locale (no matter which language), and need to be generated if you are using glibc (locale-gen). When you are using im module, there is no such limitation. === Is it a Qt application that bundles its own Qt library? === Bundled Qt library usually uses theirs own plugin directory, which is different from system's Qt. And commonly, they are also using Qt different on system Qt, which will also make it incompatible if you simply copy the system fcitx-qt files. But anyway, you can start to check whether it loads your copied files with following environment variable. Depending on how the XIM application is written, it may need to find specific font to make it work. On Archlinux xorg-mkfontscale is required to generate correct font dir files. After install it, you'll need to restart X Server to make it work. QT_DEBUG_PLUGINS=1 QT_LOGGING_RULES="*.debug=true" And try to resolve all incompatible errors. Usually, ubuntu's fcitx-frontend-qt5 and libfcitxqt5-1 are good source for fcitx-qt5 build against specific qt version. For example, DraftSight 2017S0 [https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/fcitx/9e4TI39_4sk] may work with xenial's fcitx-qt5. === Emacs === Try LC_CTYPE=zh_CN.UTF-8 emacs Don't forget to check your locale -a contains that. See also [[Special:MyLanguage/Input method related environment variables|Input method related environment variables]]. Emacs will use `-*-*-*-r-normal--<some font size>-*-*-*-*-*-*-*' as basefont(in src/xfns.c), if you do not have one matched, the code for input method won't run. Install some font package may help (For required fonts xorg-fonts-misc might be the right package but you can also try other xorg-fonts-* package.). === Non Gtk/Qt Wayland Application (Alacritty, kitty, etc) === It is possible that the application you use does not support input method at all, because they need to have relevant code to implement it. Even if they do, it is highly possible that compositor does not have the support for input method. Only GNOME Shell and KWin has full text-input-v3 support. As of 2022/05/07, sway still does not have full zwp_input_method_v2 support to support input surface. For KWin, you will need Plasma 5.24+ and Fcitx 5.0.14+ and make KWin to start Fcitx 5. You will need to go to Virtual Keyboard KCM and select Fcitx 5 in the KCM. == Candidate window is blinking under wayland with Fcitx 5 == This is mainly due to the whole poor state of wayland input method. The existing wayland input method protocol is not widely supported by compositor. Even though fcitx 5 support those protocols, the poor support in application and compositor make them not usable. Not to mention certain design flaw within the protocol. In order to make input method some what usable with '''CURRENTLY''' available and widely adopted techniques, Fcitx 5 implements a mechanism called "Client Side Input Panel", which basically asks client application to render the input window. This is done through dbus and IM Module for Gtk/Qt. The implementation requires using a underlying wayland protocol xdg_popup to show the window. Unfortunately, only new version of xdg_popup protocol supports '''moving''' a visible popup window, and this part is '''NOT''' implemented in Gtk3 and Qt5. What makes it even worse is that Gtk3 and Qt5 both comes to their end of life, which means it is not possible to get this new protocol support in Gtk3/Qt5. The issue is that input method requires to display a window that resizes and moves extremely frequently. To mitigate this issue, Fcitx 5 IM Module implement a hack that when we need to move the window, it will hide the window first and then show the window. Unfortunately, this would cause certain-level of blinking. It might looks bad in certain hardware and compositor combination. Here is some possible workaround for this. 1. Use kimpanel under GNOME shell, which will make the candidate window to be rendered with a totally different mechanism, which won't cause any blinking. 2. Disable Fade-in and Fade-Out effect under KWin. KWin seems to tolerate such blink much better than certain compositor. == Problem in Firefox and Google Docs == You might want to toggle preedit off temporarily, which is Ctrl+Alt+P. == Cannot use Fcitx in flash == Please read [[Special:MyLanguage/Hall of Shame for Linux IME Support|Hall of Shame for Linux IME Support]], and use im module. == Cannot type English after updating to fcitx newer than 4.2.4 == Make sure you have add "[[Special:myLanguage/Keyboard|Keyboard]]" to the input method list. You can use [[Special:myLanguage/Integrate with Desktop#Configuration tool|Configuration tool]]. And you may want to move "Keyboard" to the first one. == Unexpected keyboard layout change == Use [[Special:myLanguage/Integrate with Desktop#Configuration tool|Configuration tool]], to bind specific keyboard layout to the specific input method. == xmodmap settings being overwritten == Fcitx now control keyboard layout and when switch layout, xmodmap setting will be overwritten. So fcitx-xkb provides an option to specify the xmodmap script and let fcitx loads it for you whenever keyboard layout changes. Or disable fcitx-xkb addon is also a solution for you, or if your requirement is simply, for example, switching Caps Lock and Esc, which is provided by xkb option, you can just set it with your desktop keyboard configuration tool (Gnome and KDE all support such configuration). For more detailed explanation, xmodmap is a very low level tool, that doesn't aware keyboard layout. For X11, keyboard layout is built on a set of profile, when such profile is loaded, anything you changed with xmodmap will be overwritten, this isn't specific to fcitx, but all tool that support keyboard layout configuration. Xkb option is a set of profile that can do some pre-defined change over keyboard layout, including many thing that people usually do with xmodmap, for example, defining where dead key is, switching Caps Lock and Esc, and so on. Unless you have special requirements, xkb layout and xkb option is recommended. Since 4.2.7, Fcitx will try to load ~/.Xmodmap if it exists. == Configure user interface, font, vertical list == Use [[Special:myLanguage/Integrate with Desktop#Configuration tool|Configuration tool]], Addon Configuration -> Classic UI. If you are using [[Special:myLanguage/Configtool|fcitx-configtool]] newer than 0.4.5 or [[Special:myLanguage/Kcm|kcm-fcitx]] newer 0.4.1, you can directly configure those from the first level tab. == Possible issue for GNOME 3.6 == [[Note for GNOME Later than 3.6]] == [[Special:MyLanguage/ClassicUI|Classic UI]] is not transparent == * This problem might NOT exist any more since 4.2.6 with a different approach for detect composite manager. * Restart Fcitx first, if it's ok then, it might be a bug in your Window manager. Gnome-Shell, xcompmgr is known to have this bug. You can try to set the delay start to walkaround this problem. * If restart Fcitx doesn't solve this problem, you should check whether your window manager supports composite or it's enabled or not. === Kwin === Enable desktop effects. === Metacity before GNOME3 === gconftool-2 -s --type bool /apps/metacity/general/compositing_manager true === Xfce === Xfwm support composite, but need to be enabled by hand. === Compiz === 0.9 series compiz can disable composite. You can use ccsm to configure it. === Other window manager === You can use xcompmgr, cairo-compmgr as composite manager for them. == Minecraft == Original Minecraft under linux doesn't support input method, what make it worse is, XIM will conflict with its key event processing, one way to work around is, set a wrong environment variable on purpose for minecraft, then start up it. You can use following script to do that <pre>#!/bin/sh # set a wrong one export XMODIFIERS="@im=null" # start minecraft, this might change depends on you're mod, but simply its what you ARE using to start minecraft. java -Xmx1024M -Xms512M -cp minecraft.jar net.minecraft.LauncherFrame</pre> This way can be also used, if you don't want fcitx to work on some application which is using XIM. There is a mod can be used to support input under Linux, called [http://forum.minecraftuser.jp/viewtopic.php?t=6279 NihongoMOD], 1.2.2 with minecraft 1.5.2 can work with Fcitx without upper hack. == Root application under normal user X == Root application under X normal user session is always broken (in general, not specific to fcitx), due to the fact that dbus is a user session only process. The only way to type in root application with normal fcitx is to use XIM, set GTK_IM_MODULE=xim and QT_IM_MODULE=xim before you start your application. == Cursor Following problem == There is a common misunderstanding that it's input method's fault that input window could not follow the cursor, which is simply wrong. This is how cursor following works: Application send the position to Input method, then input method move the input window. So if application do not send the position, the position would be wrong. This behavior is controlled by application, but not input method. So if you meet any problem, please ask application to fix it, don't ask input method to do anything. Actually, input method could do nothing with this. Although there is some walkaround for specific problem, bug is still in application, not in input method. * Opera, enable on the spot for [[Special:MyLanguage/XIM|XIM]]. * Firefox, enable preedit. [[Category:How-to]]
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