Documentation
Documentation for developers
Dasher Geometry and Dynamics
Documentation for users who want to
fiddle with the alphabets, colours, or training texts
training text
We strongly encourage users to optimize the training text
for their personal use.
Dasher learns all the time as you write, and
saves what it learns in a file
(for example, all the writing of a linux user using English
will be stored in a file called
~/.dasher/training_english_GB.txt).
It is a great idea to take a load of text that is like
what you are going to write in the future
and put it into this file, or into
the equivalent system-wide file
(for example, /usr/local/share/dasher/training_english_GB.txt
on a linux system).
Next time Dasher is started, or next time you switch alphabet,
both these files will be read so as to
train the language model to make appropriate predictions.
colours
Users can configure the colours used by Dasher.
Dasher uses 242 colours at any one time.
How those colours are defined and used
is specified by two files,
the alphabet file
(Example)
and
the colour file
(example).
Both these XML files are plain text files that you can edit.
The alphabet file specifies by numbers between 1 and 242
which colours each letter and group in the alphabet should have.
The colour file defines what those 242 colours actually are.
Version 4 of Dasher offers several colour schemes to choose among.
Many of our alphabets use a colour scheme (a 'palette') called European/Asian.
Here's how the default colours work for European languages.
The GROUPS are coloured like this:
-
accents and marks - ORANGE (colour number 51)
- lower case characters - this group is not coloured
- upper case characters - YELLOW (colour number 111)
- numerals - RED (colour 113)
- punctuation - DARK GREEN (colour 112)
- space character and newline - WHITE (not actually a group)