Cangjie method
The Cangjie method (Traditional Chinese: 倉頡輸入法; Simplified Chinese: 仓颉输入法), also spelt Changjei method, presumably a spelling mistake of some early Chinese system (The name 倉頡 is romanized in Pinyin as cāng jié, in Wade-Giles as ts`ang chieh, in Gwoyeu Romatzyh as tsang jye. None of them gives the spelling changjei.)—is a system by which Chinese characters may be entered into the computer. Invented in 1976 by Chu Bong-Foo (Traditional Chinese: 朱邦復; pinyin: Zhū Bāngfù), the method is named after Cangjie, the man historically attributed with the invention of the first writing system of China, and the name is given by then Defence Minister Chiang Wei-kuo of the Republic of China. Although the input method was initially based upon Traditional Chinese characters, it has since been revamped such that interoperability between Cangjie and the Simplified Chinese character set was made possible
The Cangjie method (Traditional Chinese: 倉頡輸入法; Simplified Chinese: 仓颉输入法), also spelt Changjei method, presumably a spelling mistake of some early Chinese system (The name 倉頡 is romanized in Pinyin as cāng jié, in Wade-Giles as ts`ang chieh, in Gwoyeu Romatzyh as tsang jye. None of them gives the spelling changjei.)—is a system by which Chinese characters may be entered into the computer. Invented in 1976 by Chu Bong-Foo (Traditional Chinese: 朱邦復; pinyin: Zhū Bāngfù), the method is named after Cangjie, the man historically attributed with the invention of the first writing system of China, and the name is given by then Defence Minister Chiang Wei-kuo of the Republic of China. Although the input method was initially based upon Traditional Chinese characters, it has since been revamped such that interoperability between Cangjie and the Simplified Chinese character set was made possible
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