A quick search didn't cause anything to pop up, but it was quick.
I'd like to drop it here in case anyone has an idea.
Typing an .odt document in LibreWriter. Using, say, Liberation Serif font, in English.
The keyboard is only set up to type English characters.
When I want to include Korean language characters, I do a copy (from anywhere) and a paste (into the .odt document).
Works like a charm.
BUT ... sometimes it fights me, sometimes I can copy, paste, type, on and on, and the English and Korean land nicely.
Sometimes, it fights me:
I type some English, and the font is Liberation Serif.
Then I paste some Korean text (in NOTO Sans CJ K KR font) into the document at that spot, and THEN after that Korean text, the font continues as NOTO Sans CJ K KR, and I must manually change it back to Liberation Serif.
Believe it or not, sometimes that "fight" doesn't happen at all, even during a lengthy document.
Sometimes, it's as if L-W has an AI that handles it. Sounds crazy.
What do you think is going on?
If it is a lucky thing when it works seamlessly, then it is one helluva lucky thing IMO -- very unlikely event!
Just to make this somewhat concrete, I grabbed a random piece of text, which is typical of the text I am talking about.
Remember, I do NOT type the Korean text into the .odt document -- I paste it (from elsewhere, like a translator, a Google virtual Korean keyboard that I use, an AI machine, whatever).
Typical text segment showing the mixture of fonts (from a grammar summary I am constructing): (Edit: Note: The italics was added by KFN inside the Quote function I used to post this; but that doesn't matter anyway.)
I'd like to drop it here in case anyone has an idea.
Typing an .odt document in LibreWriter. Using, say, Liberation Serif font, in English.
The keyboard is only set up to type English characters.
When I want to include Korean language characters, I do a copy (from anywhere) and a paste (into the .odt document).
Works like a charm.
BUT ... sometimes it fights me, sometimes I can copy, paste, type, on and on, and the English and Korean land nicely.
Sometimes, it fights me:
I type some English, and the font is Liberation Serif.
Then I paste some Korean text (in NOTO Sans CJ K KR font) into the document at that spot, and THEN after that Korean text, the font continues as NOTO Sans CJ K KR, and I must manually change it back to Liberation Serif.
Believe it or not, sometimes that "fight" doesn't happen at all, even during a lengthy document.
Sometimes, it's as if L-W has an AI that handles it. Sounds crazy.
What do you think is going on?
If it is a lucky thing when it works seamlessly, then it is one helluva lucky thing IMO -- very unlikely event!
Just to make this somewhat concrete, I grabbed a random piece of text, which is typical of the text I am talking about.
Remember, I do NOT type the Korean text into the .odt document -- I paste it (from elsewhere, like a translator, a Google virtual Korean keyboard that I use, an AI machine, whatever).
Typical text segment showing the mixture of fonts (from a grammar summary I am constructing): (Edit: Note: The italics was added by KFN inside the Quote function I used to post this; but that doesn't matter anyway.)
to get/become/ or past tense got/became [bigger, smarter, longer, younger, more beautiful]
Rule: stem +아지다 / 어지다 / 해지다 (ㅏ ㅗ; or other; or 하다)
present: stem +아져요/어져요/해져요
past: stem +아졌어요/어졌어요/해졌어요
"for": when you do something for someone's benefit, you can use 을/를 위해(사)
Irregulars (v. or adj.), when last letter of the stem is ㄷ ㅅ 르 ㄹ or ㅂ
(르: to see which to add, 아/어 or 았/었, you check the syllable BEFORE the 르)
L6P6 Verb & Adjective Clause Modifier in Future Tense: same rule for both verb and adjective
Basic Rule: stem without final consonant add -ㄹ; stem with final consonant + 을
So just the simple symbol, ㄹ or 을, added to the verb stem, will futurize that verb as a modifier.
Rule: stem +아지다 / 어지다 / 해지다 (ㅏ ㅗ; or other; or 하다)
present: stem +아져요/어져요/해져요
past: stem +아졌어요/어졌어요/해졌어요
"for": when you do something for someone's benefit, you can use 을/를 위해(사)
Irregulars (v. or adj.), when last letter of the stem is ㄷ ㅅ 르 ㄹ or ㅂ
(르: to see which to add, 아/어 or 았/었, you check the syllable BEFORE the 르)
L6P6 Verb & Adjective Clause Modifier in Future Tense: same rule for both verb and adjective
Basic Rule: stem without final consonant add -ㄹ; stem with final consonant + 을
So just the simple symbol, ㄹ or 을, added to the verb stem, will futurize that verb as a modifier.
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