Hello All:Same solution than before. I knew there a library in the spec of Adobe and its scripting languages ( a derivative of ECMA/DOM) that implemented IME as well. Like a charm.
For virtual kybrds , specially. As before, It would be nice that someone at Adobe Inc. could introduce us to this possible solution . Cheers --- Delfi Ramirez My digital signature [1] +34 633 589231 del...@segonquart.net [2] twitter: delfinramirez IRC: segonquart Skype: segonquart [3] http://segonquart.net [4] http://delfiramirez.info [5] On 2015-06-18 13:17, Florian Rivoal wrote: > On 18 Jun 2015, at 13:07, Jonny Rein Eriksen <jon...@opera.com> wrote: On > 18.06.2015 12:01, Florian Rivoal wrote: Would it make sense to add an 'auto' > value to the lang attribute, explicitly instructing the UA to try and guess > what language is being entered? Remembering what was used last time being a > legitimate way to guess, but looking at what keyboard you're using, or at the > content of what you're typing being others. UAs that don't know how to guess > would be no worse off than today, but for those that do, you'd get the > benefits that Jonny was talking about, plus any language dependent css being > applied correctly... The mechanics of it aren't hard to polifyll, so maybe > leaving it up to author provided js is good enough, but a js implementation > would have access to less information to base its guess on. For instance, if > you're using a typical mobile on-screen keyboard, it wouldn't know which > language the keyboard is in, which provides a big clue as to what you're > typing. This is another part of the problem. There is currently no way to set which keyboard you would like to use on iOS/Android if I understand correctly. We could maybe get a standardized API which could solve this. Having support in desktop browsers first for handling spell check better would probably help in achieving this though. If a text input field has lang=foo, and your system has a (virtual) keyboard for language foo, I would expect that keyboard to be the one presented to you. Same thing with IMEs (e.g. you have a US keyboard and a Japanese IME installed on your desktop computer, when focusing a text input field with lang=ja, I would expect the IME to be turned on). Not sure if any spec change is needed for that. - Florian Links: ------ [1] http://delfiramirez.info/public/dr_public_key.asc [2] mail:%20del...@segonquart.net [3] skype:segonquart [4] http://segonquart.net [5] http://delfiramirez.info