Sounds pretty good. I would suggest involving some WebKit people as well, like either me or Simon Hausmann as we both worked on input method support in WebKit2 / N9 browser.
Kenneth ________________________________________ From: Frederik Gladhorn [[email protected]] Sent: Friday, January 27, 2012 7:08 PM To: Christiansen Kenneth.R (Nokia-MP/Copenhagen); [email protected] Cc: [email protected] Subject: Re: [Development] Trip report, Accessibility Hackfest, A Coruña Torsdag 26. januar 2012 17.04.39 skrev Christiansen Kenneth.R: > Hi there, > > I wonder how the accessibility work for editors relates to input methods, > because the input methods need about the same information (selected text, > surrounding text, etc), and basing it on top of that would mean that it > will work for WebKit as well - which is a big bonus in my eyes :-) I had input methods on my list to check... but it dropped off at some point, thanks for reminding me. Actually this sounds like a very good idea, the Gnome people seem to have this based on one class that does all the font stuff. IIRC it's done by exposing some Pango things/functions, I don't know the details. I'm not sure how low level we want to go, but I'll try to find out where the common ground is with the font and input people here. Greetings Frederik > > Cheers > Kenneth _______________________________________________ Development mailing list [email protected] http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/development
