From Fedora Project Wiki
Description
This test case ensures that Anthy with Unicode support (anthy-unicode) functions correctly to input Japanese characters in a Fedora environment.
Setup
- Ensure you have a Fedora system with a graphical interface.
- Install
anthy-unicode
and any required dependencies, e.g.,sudo dnf install anthy-unicode -y
. - Configure the system to use Anthy as the default input method for Japanese.
How to test
- Open a text editor or word processing software.
- Switch the input method to Anthy (usually with a keyboard shortcut or system menu option).
- Begin typing in phonetic Japanese (Romaji) and observe Anthy's suggestions for Kanji, Hiragana, and Katakana.
- Select a suggested character or word from the Anthy interface or conversion list.
- Input various phrases, ensuring to test different types of characters (Kanji, Hiragana, Katakana).
- Save the document and reopen it, ensuring that characters are displayed correctly.
- Optionally, copy the text into different applications (browser, email, etc.) to ensure compatibility.
Expected Results
- Switching to the Anthy input method should be seamless.
- Typing in Romaji should present appropriate Japanese character suggestions.
- Selected characters from Anthy's suggestions should correctly appear in the input area of the application.
- All Japanese characters should be consistently and correctly displayed across various applications.
Optional
For a more comprehensive test:
- Test compatibility with different fonts and ensure characters render properly.
- Use Anthy in various applications, such as chat applications, web browsers, and office suites.
- Experiment with Anthy's settings and configurations, if available, to check different input behaviors and options.