Switching between Arabic and French

Walter Bender walter at laptop.org
Mon Mar 17 22:14:00 EDT 2008


While the laptop can readily switch between up to four keyboard
mappings at a time, the physical keyboard is probably only capable of
supporting two sets of glyphs. We've opted to date to put Latin and
one other set per keyboard. Any other ideas more than welcome.

-walter

On Tue, Mar 18, 2008 at 2:07 AM, Edward Cherlin <echerlin at gmail.com> wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 17, 2008 at 6:00 PM, Walter Bender <walter at laptop.org> wrote:
>  > you can switch the keyboard on the fly, using the language key. you
>  >  can switch the language of the interface per session, using the
>  >  sugar-control-panel. most activities can accommodate Latin and Arabic
>  >  scripts concurrently.
>  >
>  >  -walter
>
>  There is another related issue. Hindi and Urdu are the same language
>  written in Devanagari and Arabic scripts, respectively. Hausa, spoken
>  mainly in Nigeria, was formerly written in Arabic alphabet, and more
>  recently in Arabic. Mongolian was written in Cyrillic in the period of
>  Soviet domination, and the Mongols would like to go back to their
>  traditional alphabet. It used to be normal for people in India to
>  speak three or four languages written in different alphabets, and
>  often more. The Hope Flowers School in Israel teaches in English,
>  Hebrew, and Arabic.
>
>
>
>  >  On 3/18/08, Ralph A. Mack <ralph at macksoft.com> wrote:
>  >  > Hello,
>  >  >
>  >  >  I have a question.
>  >  >
>  >  >  Schools in at least some countries in the Middle East and the Maghrib
>  >  >  typically teach in Arabic first and then a European language, typically
>  >  >  French or English. Therefore, I can envision students having to do two
>  >  >  written assignments, one in Arabic and another in French, for different
>  >  >  teachers in the same week. (I can imagine this issue would arise in
>  >  >  other areas as well.)
>  >  >
>  >  >  Short of switching the operating language of the device and restarting
>  >  >  it, is there a way to switch between entering Arabic language text and
>  >  >  French or English language text from activity to activity in the current
>  >  >  emulation images? If not, is this considered a desirable feature? Would
>  >  >  it be considered confusing? Has anybody suggested an alternative
>  >  >  approach for bilingual students? Has there been any feedback from folks
>  >  >  focusing on education in the Middle East or other affected areas about
>  >  >  this? Do they consider it important?
>  >  >
>  >  >  [Here's what puts the question squarely on the devel list....] Assuming
>  >  >  that some feature with the needed effect is in the cards, who is working
>  >  >  on it? Is it complete? If not, how can I help? While it would affect
>  >  >  many areas, I suspect it would be felt most sharply in Write (as might a
>  >  >  number of bi-di issues, at least in the last image I tried).
>  >  >
>  >  >  Lupestro
>  >  >
>  >  >
>  >  >  _______________________________________________
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>  >  >
>  >
>  >
>  >  --
>  >  Walter Bender
>  >  One Laptop per Child
>  >  http://laptop.org
>  >
>  >
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>  >  Devel at lists.laptop.org
>  >  http://lists.laptop.org/listinfo/devel
>  >
>
>
>
>  --
>  Edward Cherlin
>  End Poverty at a Profit by teaching children business
>  http://www.EarthTreasury.org/
>  "The best way to predict the future is to invent it."--Alan Kay
>



-- 
Walter Bender
One Laptop per Child
http://laptop.org



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