Hello
simon.proctor,
Any thoughts, resources, book links that you think may be of use would
be gratefully accepted!
Whilst I realise that this reply at first might not seem all that
helpful seeing as you are obviously using Windows (Win2k) please
persevere.
There is a Freeware programme called
'Nuku' which unfortunately only
seems to be available for Apple Macs. However it does pretty much everything
you have asked in your post and maybe you have access to a Mac through work
or a friend?
If so it would give you some pointers if you still want to create a Perl
app with Tk (if only so that you can screengrab all the characters ;). It would
also be a good visualisation tool for creating the "*fake keyboard*"
layout.
Its pretty feature rich (this is from the Readme "US spelling"):
How?
Start it. Start clicking. Nuku will start in Quiz Mode the first time
you start it, the mode in which you click upon the translation of the
character shown in the upper left corner. It will measure your score,
tell you when you are wrong, and in that case, what you did wrong. Thi
+s
is the primary objective of Nuku. The other mode is Learning Mode, whe
+re
you simply click on the translated syllable you are interested in, and
Nuku will show the corresponding Japanese character.
...
Romanization systems?
There are several methods of romanizing Japanese kana, the collective
word for both hiragana and katakana. The three main ones are Hepburn,
Kunrei and Nihon-shiki. The official system is Kunrei, which does not
correspond to the actual pronounciation of the characters. However, th
+is
is the main advantage of Hepburn, it is less regular than Kunrei, but
you can also tell how to pronounce words from the romanization. The
third system, Nihon-shiki, is basically Kunrei, slightly altered to no
+t
map two kana with the same sound onto one romanization.
If you don't have access to a Mac sorry for wasting your time, but I hope
this might be of some benefit if you do.
And no, I have nothing to do with the programme what-so-ever :)
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