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Psy wrote:Both Windows and Mac have radical and stroke based methods of looking up characters (see the IME pad on Windows or the Character Palette on Mac), in addition, there is a handwriting analysis feature in the Windows IME pad, so you can draw (you need to know proper stroke order) unknown characters there as well. Just fool around with the language bar/language menu and you should have no trouble finding it.
watermen wrote:Psy wrote:Both Windows and Mac have radical and stroke based methods of looking up characters (see the IME pad on Windows or the Character Palette on Mac), in addition, there is a handwriting analysis feature in the Windows IME pad, so you can draw (you need to know proper stroke order) unknown characters there as well. Just fool around with the language bar/language menu and you should have no trouble finding it.
There is no IME pad in Mac OS 10.5. So how do I find the kanji?
Belton wrote:You look it up. then re-write or copy and paste
online
www.jisho.org
has a nice interface and multi-radical lookup.
There is a handwriting recognition tool at
http://kanji.sljfaq.org/draw.html
offline
JEDict
www.jedict.com
is a standalone dictionary reader for the mac that has a good kanji search interface and also a crude way of writing the kanji for lookup as well.
In OSX 10.5 the Character Pallette (turned on in the "International" System preference pane -- Input menu) if you choose "View: Japanese, by Radical" it will let you visually search by stroke count and radical like a paper dictionary.