this post was submitted on 14 Jan 2025
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So, if the Chinese don't have an alphabet and use only pictograms comprising of over 6500 characters, how do they type on a keyboard? Do they have really large keyboards with over 6500 keys or do they just say "Screw Mandarin" and type in English (which can't be true because I've seen Chinese characters on webpages/spam emails)? Is there some kind of algorithmic key pressing magic that goes on in order to produce said characters?

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[–] [email protected] 17 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (4 children)

I've seen Chinese and Japanese people spell out the sound with an English keyboard and then select the character that they want from a dropdown like menu.

In Korean (and I think some Chinese/Japanese keyboards) you can "build" the character, from building blocks like this

My keyboard

So if I want to use the "character" for "house", I first click the symbol ㅈ then I click ㅣ for 지 then ㅂ for 집 and it puts it together.

I can slightly tweak the shape by tapping the base symbol multiple times (i.e if I have ㅜ and tap ㆍ it makes ㅠ), which can be combined with more symbols like ㅇ and ㄱ to make 육 (the number 6)

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 day ago

Hangul doesnt work the same way since each character is a letter. The blocks are syllables and are automatic using rules.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 day ago

In Korean (and I think some Chinese/Japanese keyboards) you can "build" the character, from building blocks like this

I'd say you're not building the character, but typing in the characters one by one.

집, as you know from typing it, is three characters in one. All three components are distinct. They can't stand alone, but that's not much different than "c" not really being able to stand alone in English. (If we refer to the letter C, we often capitalize it)

In Japanese, people can easily type in Hiragana (their "alphabet"), and the Kanji can be suggested like with autocorrect. The sound is the same, but the visual is different.

Chinese is a different beast because they don't have an "alphabet" of "letters" the ways that Korean and Japanese do.

(They're not "alphabets", but they do have elements that are much closer to letters than Chinese does)

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 day ago

Japanese is kind of similar. Although usually native speakers do not use an English keyboard. They use this:

Since Japanese has 5 vowels, each key here represents a consonant and can actually enter any of the 5 vowels by either tapping on it or flicking up, down, left or right on it. Once you've built the word you're trying to write, you can tap on the auto suggested kanji or katakana or leave it as is in hiragana.

The exception is the bottom left and right keys which are for alternative consonants (I'm not sure the actual linguistic term) and punctuation which have fewer options but work similarly.

So if I'm writing the character for home, I'd flick the button toy he right of the emoji button left for い and then right for え. Once I have both hiragana characters, I just need to tap on the 家 character that appears above the keyboard.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Reminds me of whatever this is

1000060901

[–] [email protected] 2 points 22 hours ago* (last edited 22 hours ago)

T9

I was using a keyboard for it for a while a couple months ago but when back to a keyboard due to missing features.