Input methods
This is a list of input methods for Toki Pona, including different scripts, such as sitelen pona.
Latin script input[edit | edit source]
ASCII syllabary (jan Lentan)[edit | edit source]
In 2022, jan Lentan developed an experimental keyboard layout, inspired by jan Misali's toki pona ASCII syllabary.[1][2] It is currently not available for download, either for desktop or mobile.
jan Lentan sets out the following guidelines for his system:
- None of the lowercase characters for existing letters should used.
- Syllables in the form jV use the capital version of their respective vowel.
- If Cu syllable uses a capital letter, the corresponding Ci is its lowercase version.
- If Co syllable uses a capital letter, the corresponding Ca is its lowercase version.
- The number keys 1, 2, 3, and 5 are used for wan, tu, mute, and luka, respectively (as in their first mora of the words).
- The words li and mi are mapped to J and I keys, respectively.
- The syllable lu is additionally mapped to the V key for easy accessibility.
Gboard[edit | edit source]
Gboard is a virtual keyboard app for Android and iOS. It lacks a Toki Pona keyboard option. To add Toki Pona words to the suggestion box, follow the instructions below:
- Install this ZIP file (all nimi ku suli).
- Press ⚙ Settings on your keyboard.
- Go to Dictionary → Personal dictionary.
- Select "All languages" or choose your preferred language.
- Press the ellipsis (three dots) icon in the top-right corner.
- Select "Import".
- Locate the downloaded ZIP file and tap to import it.
- Press "Save".
sitelen pona input[edit | edit source]
Ajemi[edit | edit source]
Ajemi is an input method editor developed by dec32 in 2024, using RIME.[3][4] It is available for Windows.
Sitelen Pona Keyboard Layout (jan Lepeka)[edit | edit source]
In 2022, jan Lepeka created a sitelen pona keyboard, in which keys are directly mapped to UCSUR codepoints. Common words are typed with no modifiers, while rarer words are typed with ⇧ Shift, as well as AltGr and ⌥ Option (macOS).[5] It is currently available on the KreativeKorp website.
In 2023, she also made a set of keycaps for this layout.[6][7] In 2024, jan Sawaki created a webpage to practice using this layout.[8] Later in 2024, this layout got updated to support Keyman Mobile.
Toki Pona Keyboard (Timeo Pochin)[edit | edit source]
The Toki Pona Keyboard created by Timeo San Pochin is a virtual keyboard app for Android,[9] using standard Android libraries. Although the keyboard has sitelen pona key caps, it inputs plain-text sitelen Lasina; therefore, sitelen pona only appears when combined with a font that supports ASCII transcription.
The keyboard consists of four rows and seven columns.
- The leftmost two columns are the eight most used words:
- li e ni a mi toki pona ala
- The third through sixth columns contain words starting with each letter, sorted alphabetically:
- ale en ike jan kama la ma nimi o pi sina tawa utala wile
- The other keys include punctuation and formatting options:
- [ " . ? ⌫ Backspace ↵ Enter
In order to insert the word on the key cap, the key should be tapped twice. For all remaining words, one must tap the first letter (⬛︎ light blue) on this part of the keyboard, and then tap the key for the second letter (⬛︎ cyan), and, if the second letter was ⬛︎ dark cyan, optionally the third letter. The last column lacks any words and consists of the following symbols/actions (⬛︎ dark blue): period, question mark, backspace and new line. To type a dash between two words, the first word must be dragged towards the second one. This functionality exists to type scales compound glyphs in fonts such as linja pona. Additionally, non-pu words are highlighted in an ⬛︎ orange background.
Wakalito[edit | edit source]
Wakalito is a keyboard layout created by jan Likipi and kala pona Tonyu in 2022.[10][11] It is based on the glyph components in sitelen pona to type words, similar to Cangjie for Chinese characters. It is available on all desktop platforms and on iOS.
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ jan Lentan. "toki pona keyboard layout". lipu-sona.pona.la. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
- ↑ jan Misali. "toki pona ASCII syllabary". seximal.net. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
- ↑ dec32. "Ajemi". GitHub. Retrieved 1 January 2024.
- ↑ "RIME" (in Chinese). rime.im. Retrieved 1 January 2024.
- ↑ Rebecca Bettencourt (jan Lepeka). "Sitelen Pona Keyboard Layout". KreativeKorp. Retrieved 31 December 2023.
- ↑ jan Lepeka [u/RebeccaRGB]. "sitelen ponakeycaps". Reddit. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
- ↑ jan Lepeka [RebeccaRGB]. (26 October 2023). "sitelen-pona-keycaps". GitHub. Retrieved 31 December 2023.
- ↑ jan Sawaki. "sitelen pona typist". zSnout. Retrieved 17 January 2024.
- ↑ Timeo Sam Pochin [timeopochin]. (30 May 2020). "Toki Pona Keyboard". GitHub. Retrieved 31 January 2024.
- ↑ kala pona Tonyu. "pali suli". kala.li.pona.la. Retrieved 15 December 2023.
- ↑ Theodore Dubois (jan Tepo). "nasin sitelen Wakalito". App Store. Retrieved 15 December 2023.
Text input | Fonts · Wakalito · Autocorrect · Text-to-speech · ASCII |
---|---|
Standardization | ISO 639-3 · UCSUR |