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

  1. Ensure you have a Fedora system with a graphical interface.
  2. Install anthy-unicode and any required dependencies, e.g., sudo dnf install anthy-unicode -y.
  3. Configure the system to use Anthy as the default input method for Japanese.

How to test

  1. Open a text editor or word processing software.
  2. Switch the input method to Anthy (usually with a keyboard shortcut or system menu option).
  3. Begin typing in phonetic Japanese (Romaji) and observe Anthy's suggestions for Kanji, Hiragana, and Katakana.
  4. Select a suggested character or word from the Anthy interface or conversion list.
  5. Input various phrases, ensuring to test different types of characters (Kanji, Hiragana, Katakana).
  6. Save the document and reopen it, ensuring that characters are displayed correctly.
  7. Optionally, copy the text into different applications (browser, email, etc.) to ensure compatibility.

Expected Results

  1. Switching to the Anthy input method should be seamless.
  2. Typing in Romaji should present appropriate Japanese character suggestions.
  3. Selected characters from Anthy's suggestions should correctly appear in the input area of the application.
  4. All Japanese characters should be consistently and correctly displayed across various applications.

Optional

For a more comprehensive test:

  1. Test compatibility with different fonts and ensure characters render properly.
  2. Use Anthy in various applications, such as chat applications, web browsers, and office suites.
  3. Experiment with Anthy's settings and configurations, if available, to check different input behaviors and options.