How to type devanagari tra letter?





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please advice me some layout for xubuntu 14.04 so that I could type devanagari (sanskrit) and particulary letter "tra", I tried everything, as it seems to me and cand find it.



Also if you could advice me some guide of how to type joined consonants and vowels of sanskrit, would be of a great help to me. I have found only one chart for old Bolnagri, which does not work for my current Xubuntu 14.



Thank you very much.
-Sasha










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  • there should be a menu entry allowing you to see the layout.. in Nepali layout offered by Ubuntu, for tra (त्र) I have to use the combination: त ‌+ ् ‌+ र ..you can check this link too..

    – precise
    Jan 14 '15 at 12:24













  • See Hindi keyboard not working properly in Ubuntu and How do I enable writing in Indian languages?

    – user68186
    Jan 14 '15 at 18:01




















1















please advice me some layout for xubuntu 14.04 so that I could type devanagari (sanskrit) and particulary letter "tra", I tried everything, as it seems to me and cand find it.



Also if you could advice me some guide of how to type joined consonants and vowels of sanskrit, would be of a great help to me. I have found only one chart for old Bolnagri, which does not work for my current Xubuntu 14.



Thank you very much.
-Sasha










share|improve this question























  • there should be a menu entry allowing you to see the layout.. in Nepali layout offered by Ubuntu, for tra (त्र) I have to use the combination: त ‌+ ् ‌+ र ..you can check this link too..

    – precise
    Jan 14 '15 at 12:24













  • See Hindi keyboard not working properly in Ubuntu and How do I enable writing in Indian languages?

    – user68186
    Jan 14 '15 at 18:01
















1












1








1


1






please advice me some layout for xubuntu 14.04 so that I could type devanagari (sanskrit) and particulary letter "tra", I tried everything, as it seems to me and cand find it.



Also if you could advice me some guide of how to type joined consonants and vowels of sanskrit, would be of a great help to me. I have found only one chart for old Bolnagri, which does not work for my current Xubuntu 14.



Thank you very much.
-Sasha










share|improve this question














please advice me some layout for xubuntu 14.04 so that I could type devanagari (sanskrit) and particulary letter "tra", I tried everything, as it seems to me and cand find it.



Also if you could advice me some guide of how to type joined consonants and vowels of sanskrit, would be of a great help to me. I have found only one chart for old Bolnagri, which does not work for my current Xubuntu 14.



Thank you very much.
-Sasha







keyboard-layout input-language






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asked Jan 14 '15 at 11:37









Sasha KudSasha Kud

62




62













  • there should be a menu entry allowing you to see the layout.. in Nepali layout offered by Ubuntu, for tra (त्र) I have to use the combination: त ‌+ ् ‌+ र ..you can check this link too..

    – precise
    Jan 14 '15 at 12:24













  • See Hindi keyboard not working properly in Ubuntu and How do I enable writing in Indian languages?

    – user68186
    Jan 14 '15 at 18:01





















  • there should be a menu entry allowing you to see the layout.. in Nepali layout offered by Ubuntu, for tra (त्र) I have to use the combination: त ‌+ ् ‌+ र ..you can check this link too..

    – precise
    Jan 14 '15 at 12:24













  • See Hindi keyboard not working properly in Ubuntu and How do I enable writing in Indian languages?

    – user68186
    Jan 14 '15 at 18:01



















there should be a menu entry allowing you to see the layout.. in Nepali layout offered by Ubuntu, for tra (त्र) I have to use the combination: त ‌+ ् ‌+ र ..you can check this link too..

– precise
Jan 14 '15 at 12:24







there should be a menu entry allowing you to see the layout.. in Nepali layout offered by Ubuntu, for tra (त्र) I have to use the combination: त ‌+ ् ‌+ र ..you can check this link too..

– precise
Jan 14 '15 at 12:24















See Hindi keyboard not working properly in Ubuntu and How do I enable writing in Indian languages?

– user68186
Jan 14 '15 at 18:01







See Hindi keyboard not working properly in Ubuntu and How do I enable writing in Indian languages?

– user68186
Jan 14 '15 at 18:01












3 Answers
3






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oldest

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0














I'm really not sure if this helps, but if you install the ibus-m17n package and relogin, additional Sanskrit input method options will be available.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thanks for your answer. I had installed IBus, but apparently my system doesn't see it. I have set Harward-Kyoto and IAST on Ibus, but when I swith between languges with Ctrl+Space I still have only US and RU which were set earlier. Do you have any Idea what am I doing wrong?

    – Sasha Kud
    Jan 18 '15 at 6:13













  • @SashaKud: No, I can't tell what's wrong. But please note that ibus and ibus-m17n are different packages. The latter is an input engine with several scripts, including a few Sanskrit. You may want to try it.

    – Gunnar Hjalmarsson
    Jan 18 '15 at 14:45



















0














To type tra (त्र) you have to type त+्+र on the keyboard. If you are using the Inscript layout, then you have to shift on the devanagari input and type l+d+j. The d (्) acts as a viraama and removes the "a" (scwha) and joins the following consonant with the previous one. The key is indicated with orange in the screenshot below.



You can see the keyboard layout if you have selected "Show current input source in the menu bar" in the System Settings > Text Entry settings.



Devavagari keyboard layout chartText Entry settings dialog






share|improve this answer































    0














    Typing of Hindi joint letter "tra" (First Letter of Ta + Ra):
    1. First type letter Ta (First letter Ta)
    2. Press Num Lock Key.
    3. Then Alt + 0170
    4. Now you will get Hindi "Tra" joint letter.






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    Z.Y. Himsagar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.





















      Your Answer








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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      0














      I'm really not sure if this helps, but if you install the ibus-m17n package and relogin, additional Sanskrit input method options will be available.






      share|improve this answer
























      • Thanks for your answer. I had installed IBus, but apparently my system doesn't see it. I have set Harward-Kyoto and IAST on Ibus, but when I swith between languges with Ctrl+Space I still have only US and RU which were set earlier. Do you have any Idea what am I doing wrong?

        – Sasha Kud
        Jan 18 '15 at 6:13













      • @SashaKud: No, I can't tell what's wrong. But please note that ibus and ibus-m17n are different packages. The latter is an input engine with several scripts, including a few Sanskrit. You may want to try it.

        – Gunnar Hjalmarsson
        Jan 18 '15 at 14:45
















      0














      I'm really not sure if this helps, but if you install the ibus-m17n package and relogin, additional Sanskrit input method options will be available.






      share|improve this answer
























      • Thanks for your answer. I had installed IBus, but apparently my system doesn't see it. I have set Harward-Kyoto and IAST on Ibus, but when I swith between languges with Ctrl+Space I still have only US and RU which were set earlier. Do you have any Idea what am I doing wrong?

        – Sasha Kud
        Jan 18 '15 at 6:13













      • @SashaKud: No, I can't tell what's wrong. But please note that ibus and ibus-m17n are different packages. The latter is an input engine with several scripts, including a few Sanskrit. You may want to try it.

        – Gunnar Hjalmarsson
        Jan 18 '15 at 14:45














      0












      0








      0







      I'm really not sure if this helps, but if you install the ibus-m17n package and relogin, additional Sanskrit input method options will be available.






      share|improve this answer













      I'm really not sure if this helps, but if you install the ibus-m17n package and relogin, additional Sanskrit input method options will be available.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Jan 14 '15 at 17:28









      Gunnar HjalmarssonGunnar Hjalmarsson

      19.8k23462




      19.8k23462













      • Thanks for your answer. I had installed IBus, but apparently my system doesn't see it. I have set Harward-Kyoto and IAST on Ibus, but when I swith between languges with Ctrl+Space I still have only US and RU which were set earlier. Do you have any Idea what am I doing wrong?

        – Sasha Kud
        Jan 18 '15 at 6:13













      • @SashaKud: No, I can't tell what's wrong. But please note that ibus and ibus-m17n are different packages. The latter is an input engine with several scripts, including a few Sanskrit. You may want to try it.

        – Gunnar Hjalmarsson
        Jan 18 '15 at 14:45



















      • Thanks for your answer. I had installed IBus, but apparently my system doesn't see it. I have set Harward-Kyoto and IAST on Ibus, but when I swith between languges with Ctrl+Space I still have only US and RU which were set earlier. Do you have any Idea what am I doing wrong?

        – Sasha Kud
        Jan 18 '15 at 6:13













      • @SashaKud: No, I can't tell what's wrong. But please note that ibus and ibus-m17n are different packages. The latter is an input engine with several scripts, including a few Sanskrit. You may want to try it.

        – Gunnar Hjalmarsson
        Jan 18 '15 at 14:45

















      Thanks for your answer. I had installed IBus, but apparently my system doesn't see it. I have set Harward-Kyoto and IAST on Ibus, but when I swith between languges with Ctrl+Space I still have only US and RU which were set earlier. Do you have any Idea what am I doing wrong?

      – Sasha Kud
      Jan 18 '15 at 6:13







      Thanks for your answer. I had installed IBus, but apparently my system doesn't see it. I have set Harward-Kyoto and IAST on Ibus, but when I swith between languges with Ctrl+Space I still have only US and RU which were set earlier. Do you have any Idea what am I doing wrong?

      – Sasha Kud
      Jan 18 '15 at 6:13















      @SashaKud: No, I can't tell what's wrong. But please note that ibus and ibus-m17n are different packages. The latter is an input engine with several scripts, including a few Sanskrit. You may want to try it.

      – Gunnar Hjalmarsson
      Jan 18 '15 at 14:45





      @SashaKud: No, I can't tell what's wrong. But please note that ibus and ibus-m17n are different packages. The latter is an input engine with several scripts, including a few Sanskrit. You may want to try it.

      – Gunnar Hjalmarsson
      Jan 18 '15 at 14:45













      0














      To type tra (त्र) you have to type त+्+र on the keyboard. If you are using the Inscript layout, then you have to shift on the devanagari input and type l+d+j. The d (्) acts as a viraama and removes the "a" (scwha) and joins the following consonant with the previous one. The key is indicated with orange in the screenshot below.



      You can see the keyboard layout if you have selected "Show current input source in the menu bar" in the System Settings > Text Entry settings.



      Devavagari keyboard layout chartText Entry settings dialog






      share|improve this answer




























        0














        To type tra (त्र) you have to type त+्+र on the keyboard. If you are using the Inscript layout, then you have to shift on the devanagari input and type l+d+j. The d (्) acts as a viraama and removes the "a" (scwha) and joins the following consonant with the previous one. The key is indicated with orange in the screenshot below.



        You can see the keyboard layout if you have selected "Show current input source in the menu bar" in the System Settings > Text Entry settings.



        Devavagari keyboard layout chartText Entry settings dialog






        share|improve this answer


























          0












          0








          0







          To type tra (त्र) you have to type त+्+र on the keyboard. If you are using the Inscript layout, then you have to shift on the devanagari input and type l+d+j. The d (्) acts as a viraama and removes the "a" (scwha) and joins the following consonant with the previous one. The key is indicated with orange in the screenshot below.



          You can see the keyboard layout if you have selected "Show current input source in the menu bar" in the System Settings > Text Entry settings.



          Devavagari keyboard layout chartText Entry settings dialog






          share|improve this answer













          To type tra (त्र) you have to type त+्+र on the keyboard. If you are using the Inscript layout, then you have to shift on the devanagari input and type l+d+j. The d (्) acts as a viraama and removes the "a" (scwha) and joins the following consonant with the previous one. The key is indicated with orange in the screenshot below.



          You can see the keyboard layout if you have selected "Show current input source in the menu bar" in the System Settings > Text Entry settings.



          Devavagari keyboard layout chartText Entry settings dialog







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Oct 6 '15 at 15:03









          Ossi ViljakainenOssi Viljakainen

          1051210




          1051210























              0














              Typing of Hindi joint letter "tra" (First Letter of Ta + Ra):
              1. First type letter Ta (First letter Ta)
              2. Press Num Lock Key.
              3. Then Alt + 0170
              4. Now you will get Hindi "Tra" joint letter.






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              Z.Y. Himsagar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.

























                0














                Typing of Hindi joint letter "tra" (First Letter of Ta + Ra):
                1. First type letter Ta (First letter Ta)
                2. Press Num Lock Key.
                3. Then Alt + 0170
                4. Now you will get Hindi "Tra" joint letter.






                share|improve this answer








                New contributor




                Z.Y. Himsagar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                Check out our Code of Conduct.























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  Typing of Hindi joint letter "tra" (First Letter of Ta + Ra):
                  1. First type letter Ta (First letter Ta)
                  2. Press Num Lock Key.
                  3. Then Alt + 0170
                  4. Now you will get Hindi "Tra" joint letter.






                  share|improve this answer








                  New contributor




                  Z.Y. Himsagar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.










                  Typing of Hindi joint letter "tra" (First Letter of Ta + Ra):
                  1. First type letter Ta (First letter Ta)
                  2. Press Num Lock Key.
                  3. Then Alt + 0170
                  4. Now you will get Hindi "Tra" joint letter.







                  share|improve this answer








                  New contributor




                  Z.Y. Himsagar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.









                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer






                  New contributor




                  Z.Y. Himsagar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.









                  answered 14 mins ago









                  Z.Y. HimsagarZ.Y. Himsagar

                  1




                  1




                  New contributor




                  Z.Y. Himsagar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.





                  New contributor





                  Z.Y. Himsagar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.






                  Z.Y. Himsagar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.






























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