JDrill search window

(search window screenshot)

This window can be brought up either from the File menu, or by clicking on a game choice with your second mouse button. It lets you search for kanji characters or definitions in a variety of ways.

The first time you ask for the search window, it will take a few seconds to appear. This is to save memory: if you don't use it at all, you'll have a little more memory to play with.

To clear up ambiguity, when you search for something that has more than one possible match, you may see the line selector window, show below. Clicking on one of the buttons will display that information in the search window.

(multiline window)

English search

The obvious search method is the English search. Enter text in the English box, and press return. Any definition with that text in it, will be brought up. If there are multiple definitions that match your search, the select window (shown above) will be brought up, to allow you to choose which definition to look at further.

Kana search

For right now, to use this requires that you know how to "spell", Japanese-style. Click on the white Kana box, and it will turn green. You may then input "romaji" text.

(kana input)

Notice that the example has a mix of kana and English letters. The input box will convert "romaji" to kana on the fly. So, after you type the 'i' in 'shi', the appropriate kana will appear.
When ready to search, press return, and it will function similarly to the English search box.

Kanji search

You may search for Kanji characters in a few different ways. Change the input mode by using the "Kanji input mode" selector.

SKIP search mode

For SKIP mode, first press the one of the four buttons to say how the kanji is divided. That is to say, If the kanji looks as if it were made of two obvious parts, would those two parts be "right/left", "top/bottom", "outside/inside", or "no way to divide". The put in the numbers it asks you for on the right.

Note that upper-right corners of box shapes are usually drawn as ONE stroke. So your average box will be drawn with three strokes, not four.

For solid, undividable characters, the last field changes drastically. You should select the number that represents

4-corner search mode

(4-corner
search)

For 4-corner mode, you select which of the 10 different shapes is the closest match to each of the four corners of the kanji character. The green corner of the 2x2 grid is always the corner you can change. When you have picked the best match for the upper-left corner, click on one of the three white other corners, to define the appropriate character for that corner.

Cut-n-paste

You can now cut-n-paste into the white area, press return, and have jdrill look up the first character you pasted. Unfortunately, due to an apparent lack in the java API, I can only get at data that has been copied from netscape and similar programs, on my machine. This means that EUC encoding should work, but anything that puts Shift-JIS data into the clipboard, probably won't be recognizable by jdrill :-(


Extra searching

jdrill recently has had "edict" dictionary support added. Unfortunately, java memory requirements are HUGE. So you would need about 32 megabytes of free memory. (swap is okay, doesn't have to be physical RAM). Read the Using Jdrill page for more details.


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Philtop