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kazinatoryesterday at 9:04 PM6 repliesview on HN

Hepburn is poorly supported in some input methods, like on Windows. If you want to type kōen or whatever, you really have to work for that ō. It's better now on mobile devices and MacOS (what I'm using now): I just long-pressed o and picked ō from a pop-up.


Replies

Etheryteyesterday at 9:25 PM

That's one aspect I really love about macOS. I'm from a small country so nearly no one makes hardware with our exact layout, but with macOS I can always just long press to fill in the gaps. I just wish all apps used native inputs, not some weird half-baked solution they built themselves.

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qingcharlesyesterday at 9:37 PM

What's the best way to type Japanese on Windows? (I have a QWERTY keyboard)

On mobile I just switch to the hiragana keyboard, but that obviously isn't a sane option on desktop unless I'm clicking all the characters with a mouse?

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adastra22yesterday at 9:16 PM

Is that part of Hepburn? It is not mentioned in the article, nor by most explainers that I’m familiar with.

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bitwizeyesterday at 9:25 PM

Compose o dash. Windows doesn't have an easy way to map in the compose key (usually ralt)?

big if true, jesus christ microsoft

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domenicdtoday at 4:43 AM

It's terrible that Windows still has nothing good for this built-in. I use https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/powertoys/quick-ac... which is at least first-party. It's still got a few bugs, but it's a big improvement.

(The bugs I've experienced: it doesn't properly disable itself during video games, despite claiming to do so; sometimes the popup seem to come up when I swear I didn't press the shortcut keys; rarely, the popup gets stuck on screen and needs to be Alt+F4'ed.)

johneayesterday at 10:14 PM

Hepburn also allows the use of the double vowel, in this case: kooen