KR-20260066038-A - METHOD OF WORD PROCESSING
Abstract
In cases where characters are entered using multiple identical operation methods, including the multi-tap method, When a character is entered, and a manual editing completion signal , such as the operation of the space button, is generated while the syllable to which the entered character belongs is being edited, even after manual editing is completed When a new character is entered, any syllable that has already been manually edited It can be combined with the newly entered character immediately before.
Inventors
- 윤경숙
Assignees
- 윤경숙
Dates
- Publication Date
- 20260512
- Application Date
- 20260505
Claims (20)
- A Korean input method characterized by including the following processes when characters are input using multiple identical operation methods, including a multi-tab method. Process A: A process in which, as a character is input, the syllable to which the input character belongs remains in an edited state or becomes an edited state; Process A-1: Process in which the manual editing completion signal is generated; Process A-2: The process in which the syllable being edited in Process A is manually edited and completed; Process B: A process in which a new character is input, and that new character is combined with a syllable that was input prior to the input of the new character—that is, a syllable that was manually edited in Process A-2—with the new character input in Process B;
- In paragraph 1, A Korean input method characterized by including the following processes. Process 1: A process in which a consonant that can be the initial consonant of a certain syllable is input, and the syllable to which the immediately preceding input consonant belongs is maintained in an editing state or becomes in an editing state; Process 1-1: The process in which the manual editing completion signal is generated; Process 1-2: The process of completing manual editing of the syllable to which the character entered in Process 1 belongs; Second process: A process in which a vowel composed of one or more vowels is input, and that vowel is combined with a syllable that was input prior to the input, that is, a syllable that was manually edited in the first and second processes;
- In paragraph 1, A Korean input method characterized by including the following processes. Second process: As a vowel consisting of one or more vowels is input, that vowel (e.g., ㅣ) is combined with a syllable that was input prior to the input, and The process in which the combined syllable, that is, the syllable to which the immediately preceding input vowel belongs, is maintained in an editing state or becomes an editing state; Section 2-1: Process in which the manual editing completion signal is generated; Step 2-2: The process in which the syllables combined in Step 2 are manually edited; Process 3: The process in which, as a consonant is input, that consonant is combined with the syllable that was input prior to the input, that is, the syllable that was manually edited in Process 2-2;
- In paragraph 1, A Korean input method characterized by including the following processes. Course 3A: As the consonant that can become the preceding consonant among the compound final consonants is input, That consonant is combined with the syllable that was entered before the consonant was entered, and The process by which the combined syllable, that is, the syllable to which the immediately preceding input consonant belongs, is maintained in an editing state or becomes an editing state; Section 3-1: Process in which the manual editing completion signal is generated; Process 3-2: The process in which the syllables combined in Process 3 are manually edited; Process 4: As a consonant that can become the second consonant among the final consonants formed by complex consonants is input, The process in which that consonant is combined with the syllable that was entered before the consonant was entered, that is, the syllable that was manually edited in Process 3-2;
- In paragraph 1, A Korean input method characterized by including the following processes. Process 1: A process in which a consonant that can be the initial consonant of a certain syllable is input, and the syllable to which the immediately preceding input consonant belongs is maintained in an editing state or becomes in an editing state; Second process: As a vowel consisting of one or more vowels is input, that vowel is combined with a syllable that was input prior to the input, and The process in which the combined syllable, that is, the syllable to which the immediately preceding input vowel belongs, is maintained in an editing state or becomes an editing state; Process 2-1: The process in which the manual editing completion signal is generated; Step 2-2: The process in which the syllables combined in Step 2 are manually edited; Third process: A process in which a consonant capable of becoming the "final consonant" of a certain syllable is input, and that consonant is combined with the syllable that was input before the consonant was input, that is, the syllable combined in the second process;
- In paragraph 1, A Korean input method characterized by including the following processes. Process 1: A process in which a consonant that can be the initial consonant of a certain syllable is input, and the syllable to which the immediately preceding input consonant belongs is maintained in an editing state or becomes in an editing state; Process 2: As a vowel composed of one or more vowels that can become the medial consonant of a syllable is input, That vowel is combined with the syllable that was entered before the vowel was entered, and The process in which the combined syllable, that is, the syllable to which the immediately preceding input vowel belongs, is maintained in an editing state or becomes an editing state; Process 3: As a consonant that can become the final consonant of a syllable is input, That consonant is combined with the syllable that was entered before the consonant was entered, that is, the syllable combined in the second process, and The process by which the combined syllable, that is, the syllable to which the immediately preceding input consonant belongs, is maintained in an editing state or becomes an editing state; Section 3-1: Process in which the manual editing completion signal is generated; Process 3-2: The process in which the syllables combined in Process 3 are manually edited; Process 4: As a consonant that can become the second consonant among the final consonants formed by complex consonants is input, The process in which that consonant is combined with the syllable that was entered before the consonant was entered, that is, the syllable that was manually edited in Process 3-2;
- In paragraph 5 or 6, A Korean input method characterized by including the following processes. Process 1-1: Process in which the manual editing completion signal is generated; Process 1-2: The process of completing manual editing of the syllable to which the character entered in Process 1 belongs;
- In paragraph 6, A Korean input method characterized by including the following processes. Section 2-1: The process in which the manual editing completion signal is generated; Step 2-2: The process in which the syllables combined in Step 2 are manually edited;
- In paragraphs 4 and 6, A Korean input method characterized by the fact that the first and second consonants of a compound consonant are assigned to the same button.
- In Paragraph 7, A Korean input method characterized by the fact that the first and second consonants of a compound consonant are assigned to the same button.
- In the case of inputting Korean vowels on a device capable of inputting Korean, Large vertical stroke (ㅣ), small horizontal stroke (), small vertical stroke (i), or large horizontal stroke (ㅡ) is entered or A button assigned to a large vertical stroke (ㅣ), a small horizontal stroke (), a small vertical stroke (i), or a large horizontal stroke (ㅡ) is operated Regarding the method by which Korean vowels can be entered, A method characterized by inputting Korean vowels through a keyboard in which a large vertical stroke (ㅣ), a small horizontal stroke (), a small vertical stroke (i), and a large horizontal stroke (ㅡ) are all assigned across any two rows of multiple buttons within the smallest rectangular area composed of buttons that can include all Korean buttons.
- In Paragraph 11, A method characterized by inputting Korean vowels through a keyboard in which a large vertical stroke (ㅣ), a small horizontal stroke (), a small vertical stroke (i), and a large horizontal stroke (ㅡ) are assigned to both the top row and the row immediately below it among several row rows of buttons within the smallest rectangular area that can contain all Korean buttons.
- In either Article 11 or Article 12, The smallest rectangular area composed of buttons that can include buttons for entering all consonants A method characterized by consonants being assigned in 3 rows and 3 columns.
- In the case of inputting Korean vowels on a device capable of inputting Korean, Large vertical stroke (ㅣ), small horizontal stroke (), small vertical stroke (i), or large horizontal stroke (ㅡ) is entered or A button assigned to a large vertical stroke (ㅣ), a small horizontal stroke (), a small vertical stroke (i), or a large horizontal stroke (ㅡ) is operated Regarding the method by which Korean vowels can be entered, A method characterized by inputting Korean vowels through a keyboard in which a large vertical stroke (ㅣ), a small horizontal stroke (), a small vertical stroke (i), and a large horizontal stroke (ㅡ) are all assigned to one of several button columns within the smallest rectangular area composed of buttons that can include all Korean buttons.
- In Paragraph 14, A method characterized by inputting Korean vowels through a keyboard in which a large vertical stroke (ㅣ), a small horizontal stroke (), a small vertical stroke (i), and a large horizontal stroke (ㅡ) are all assigned to the rightmost column of a row of buttons within the smallest rectangular area composed of buttons that can include all Korean buttons.
- In either Article 14 or Article 15, The smallest rectangular area composed of buttons that can include buttons for entering all consonants A method characterized by consonants being assigned in 4 rows and 2 columns.
- In Paragraph 14, A method characterized by inputting Korean vowels through a keyboard in which a large vertical stroke (ㅣ), a small horizontal stroke (), a small vertical stroke (i), and a large horizontal stroke (ㅡ) are all assigned to the middle column of several button columns within the smallest rectangular area composed of buttons that can include all Korean buttons.
- In either Article 14 or Article 17, The smallest rectangular area composed of buttons that can include buttons for entering all consonants A method characterized by consonants being assigned in 4 rows and 3 columns.
- In any one of Paragraph 11, Paragraph 12, Paragraph 14, Paragraph 15, or Paragraph 17, A method characterized by 'ㄱ', 'ㄴ', 'ㄷ', 'ㄹ', 'ㅂ', 'ㅅ', 'ㅇ', and 'ㅈ' being assigned to different character buttons.
- In any one of Paragraph 11, Paragraph 12, or Paragraph 19, As a method of assigning Korean characters to the keyboard, In assigning Korean characters to a keyboard that includes a smallest rectangular area of 4 rows and 3 columns, composed of buttons, which can include buttons for inputting all Korean characters, 'ㄱ,ㅋ' is assigned to the button at row 2, column 1, and 'ㄴ' is assigned to the button at row 2, column 3, and 'ㄷ,ㅌ' is assigned to the button at row 3, column 1, and 'ㄹ,ㅁ' is assigned to the button at row 3, column 2, and 'ㅂ,ㅍ' is assigned to the button at row 3, column 3, and 'ㅅ' is assigned to the button at row 4, column 1, and 'ㅇ,ㅎ' is assigned to the button at row 4, column 2, and A method characterized by assigning 'ㅈ,ㅊ' to the button at row 4, column 3.
Description
Word Processing Method {METHOD OF WORD PROCESSING} Text input technology on terminals The multi-tap method is a method of inputting characters that includes a process in which, when two or more characters are assigned to a single button, the characters assigned to that button are displayed in a continuous, rotating manner in place within the character input field when the button is operated consecutively, that is, when the same button is operated consecutively. For example, a conventional Cheonjiin keyboard like the one in Fig. 3 The button marked 'ㄱㅋ' is assigned 'ㄱㅋㄲ', If you operate that button once, 'ㄱ' is displayed in the character input field, and If you operate that button one more time, the 'ㄱ' displayed in the character input field changes to 'ㅋ', and If you operate that button one more time, the 'ㅋ' displayed in the character input field changes to 'ㄲ'. (Also, if you operate that button one more time, the 'ㄲ' displayed in the character input field often changes to 'ㄱ'.) In the multitab method, when the syllable where the cursor is currently located—that is, the syllable to which the immediately preceding character belongs—is being edited, if you operate a character button different from the one operated immediately before or operate the space button (thereby manually completing the editing of that syllable), the character is definitively entered, but As in the above example, if the same button is operated continuously, the characters assigned to the button are displayed in a continuous cycle, changing in place, and the characters of the syllable at the current cursor position are not definitively entered , so the syllable at the current cursor position is said to be in an 'editing' state . Depending on the speaker, the word 'editing' is sometimes expressed using other terms, including 'writing' or 'combination'. so, Phrases like 'editing' are equivalent to 'writing', 'combining', etc., and Words like 'editing complete' are equivalent to words such as 'writing complete' and 'combination complete'. For reference, the term 'combination' is said to be more suitable for writing systems where two or more graphemes can be combined in a single syllable, including the combination of consonants and vowels in a single syllable like Hangul, and is not suitable for writing systems such as the alphabet. Conventionally, when inputting using a multi-tap method, In most cases, the space button is assigned the function of inputting a space, as well as the function of changing the state of the syllable where the cursor is located to edited if it is currently being edited. In other words, when a syllable is being edited, operating the space button only changes the syllable to an edit-completed state, but it does not actually input a space. When a syllable is in the edited state, pressing the space button actually inputs a space. (So, if you want to insert a space after a syllable while it is in the editing state, you can press the space button to change the syllable to the edited state, and then press the space button again to actually insert the space.) For example, to input 'ga-n', if you input only 'g, a, n' (in the Cheonjiin method, 'a' is input by combining 'i' and '.'), 'gan' will be entered instead. Therefore, after inputting 'ga', while the 'ga' syllable is being edited, you operate the space button to manually change the state of the syllable containing 'ga' to edit-completed, and then input 'n'. As mentioned above Furthermore, the 'editing state' refers to a state where, from the perspective of 'combination,' if a character (e.g., 'n') that can be combined with the preceding syllable (e.g., 'ga') is entered next, the preceding syllable and the subsequently entered character can be combined (e.g., 'gan'). Traditionally, the "edited state" refers to a state in which, from the perspective of "combination," the preceding syllable and the subsequently entered character cannot be combined, even if a character capable of combining with the preceding syllable is entered next (e.g., 'ga-n'). (For reference, conventionally, combinations could not be made when the space button, etc. was operated and the 'manual editing was completed,' but In this document, we aim to enable the combination of the preceding syllable (e.g., 'ga') and the subsequently entered character (e.g., 'gan') even when the text has been 'manually edited'. It is not a major matter, but for your reference, at this hospital When inputting text on Korean-made Android devices, including conventional Samsung Electronics Android smartphones, When a syllable is in an 'editing' state, it is often displayed under an underline . For example, when the syllables 'ㅅ', '딛', and '딛'—which are frequently cited when explaining the technology of this patent—are in an editing state, they are often displayed underlines as ' ㅅ ', ' 딛 ', and ' 딛 '. (However, depending on the Android version, device model, or programming, the underline may not be displayed, or it may be d