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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] [News] input methods for linux approaching standardization
- Date: Mon, 28 Jan 2008 16:45:32 +0900
- From: "Stephen J. Turnbull" <stephen@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] [News] input methods for linux approaching standardization
- References: <4fefd6340801271803t169b872ckc86e25e5ebd84937@mail.gmail.com> <20080128033807.GB18589@lucky.cynic.net>
Curt Sampson writes: > On 2008-01-28 11:03 +0900 (Mon), Gernot Hassenpflug wrote: > > > http://spacehunt.info/2008/01/25/input-method-api-now-nearly-standardised-on-linux Don't hold your breath, unless your purpose is to turn blue. > Is that standardized for "Linux" or for X11? If they have any clue, it should be independent of X11. If you read the blog post, you will see that Hideki Hiura is a three- time offender. If he gets extradited to California or Texas, he'll go away for life. Look at the process: after three years, with two major preceding specifications with full implementations to reference, they couldn't agree on a spec ... and so they wrote code? Visions of Lucy snatching away the football as Charlie Brown charges forward to kick it fill my mind ... Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaargh! Here's what we find in the reference implementation[1]: Revision 50: /trunk/imbus/docs * .. Yes, Virginia, that *is* the *whole* *docs* *directory*. Sheesh, we never do learn, do we.[2] :( Standardization of input method APIs is a 20-year standing joke, and recent trends show ever less real interest in sharing the sandbox. Both XIM and IIIMF were plausible standards (I've worked with them both), both required a lot of discipline from the programmer, and for that reason, open source implementations sucked badly because M17N hackers have never had much discipline. So many open source hackers chose to ignore the standards for the last 10 years (basically, since IIIMF was published). I see no reason why things will be different this time around -- input methods themselves are nontrivial, and generalized input managers are downright hard -- unless the hackers have acquired better habits ... in which case it doesn't much matter which standard they follow. And this crap about "wait for publication, wait for the ISO", who are we trying to kid? If the standard is any good, the draft site should being getting slashdotted and adaptions of the current flock of IMs should be appearing already (cf ANSI C, C89, C99, HTML 2.0--3.0--4.0-- XHTML, etc, etc). Footnotes: [1] http://imbus.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/ [2] For those who aren't in on the joke, if you don't know what you're doing, writing code to do it anyway makes your ignorance far more precise. This is more than compensated as what you do know becomes exuberantly inaccurate.
- References:
- [tlug] [News] input methods for linux approaching standardization
- From: Gernot Hassenpflug
- Re: [tlug] [News] input methods for linux approaching standardization
- From: Curt Sampson
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