Yudit

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Yudit
Stable release
3.1.0[1] / 11 February 2023; 13 months ago (11 February 2023)
Written inC
Operating systemUnix-like
TypeText editor for the X Window System
LicenseGPL-2.0-only[2]
Websiteyudit.org Edit this on Wikidata

Yudit is a Unicode text editor for the X Window System.[3] It also support Linux and Macx86 64-bit as well as ARM 64-bit-v8. It was first released on 1997-11-08. It can do TrueType font rendering, printing, transliterated keyboard input and handwriting recognition with no dependencies on external engines.[4] Yudit's lack of dependence on user interface libraries like QT or GTK+ gives the software its unique look.

Yudit's conversion utilities can convert text between various encodings. Keyboard input maps can also act like text converters. There is no need for a pre-installed multi-lingual environment. Menus are translated into multiple languages.

The developer states that "since the early days of Unicode on Linux", support has improved making future versions of the program unlikely, though documentation may be updated.

It supports simultaneous processing of many languages, input methods, conversions for local character standards etc. It has facilities for entering text in all languages with only an English keyboard, using keyboard configuration maps.[5]

The author of Yudit is Gáspár Sinai, a Hungarian programmer, living and working in Japan.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Yudit changelog".
  2. ^ "GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE Version 2". June 1991. Retrieved 2022-11-13.
  3. ^ 山形浩生 (June 2000). Linux日本語環境: 最適なシステム環境構築のための基礎と実践. O'Reilly Japan. ISBN 9784873110165.
  4. ^ "Yudit: Edit your multi-language text easily".
  5. ^ "Applications with Devanagri".

External links[edit]