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Is there an esperanto keyboard?

ca, kivuye

Ubutumwa 35

ururimi: English

marianas (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 8 Mukakaro 2009 02:01:20

ceigered:Hey Marianas, just curious, does the tilde double for accenting the consonants and the 'u'? (I was just thinking that they have different accentation and because I'm assuming you're using the same method as what option+e does during I was wondering how you'd get that to work)
yes, the tilde works the same for ĉ, ĝ, ĥ, ĵ, ŝ, and ŭ.

The tilde in this case is not specific to a symbol, but works more like another shift key.

ceigered (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 8 Mukakaro 2009 04:36:05

Ah right, I didn't even know that was possible! Bona laboro amiko!

(edit: amikino, whoops malgajo.gif)

(further edit: I can't download the mac layout, something about needing a pro account)

marianas (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 23 Mukakaro 2009 17:40:34

huh... I don't know what the problem is...

mi bedaŭras. mi provos ripari ĝin.

Vilinilo (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 23 Mukakaro 2009 18:28:19

I use openSUSE Linux 11.1 and a Brazilian ABNT 2 keyboard layout. In my case, inputing Esperanto letters is ridiculously simple: ^+c=ĉ; ^+g=ĝ and so on. Only the ŭ is a little more complicated, since ^+u=û for obvious reasons... To have a ŭ I need to press Alt Gr + | + u. And I didn't need to change any configuration, that's all built-in rideto.gif

juliopcrj (Kwerekana umwidondoro) 20 Ndamukiza 2019 18:58:09

Well, a decade later, but this topic was relevant to me recently, since I instaled ubuntu 18.

My solution was quite simple: On a terminal window, just type

setxkbmap -option esperanto:qwerty

, and during this session, AltGr+ [scgjhu] will type [ŝĉĝĵĥŭ].

On windows, I was using the "Tajpi" program, which was quite good, no complains whatsoever.

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