Google Transliteration IME is available for 22 different languages 
Google Transliteration IME is an                         input method editor which allows users to enter  text in                         one of the supported languages using a roman  keyboard.                         Users can type a word the way it sounds using  Latin                         characters and Google Transliteration IME will  convert                         the word to its native script. Note that this is  not the                         same as translation -- it is the sound of the  words that                         is converted from one alphabet to the other, not  their                         meaning. Converted content will always be in  Unicode. For example, typing "hamesha" transliterates into Hindi             as:  and typing "salaam"             transliterates into Persian as:
 and typing "salaam"             transliterates into Persian as:  
Google Transliteration IME is available for 22 different languages - Amharic, Arabic, Bengali, Farsi (Persian), Greek, Gujarati, Hebrew, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Nepali, Oriya, Punjabi, Russian, Sanskrit, Serbian, Sinhalese, Tamil, Telugu, Tigrinya and Urdu.
Sample status window and the edit window for Hindi                         IME are shown below. For simplicity, Hindi IME is used as                         an example at most places in this help page.                        
                         
                         
             Install
              To install, download (If you are on a 64-bit Windows, make sure you have selected the 64-bit radio button in the download page) and run the               installer and follow the instructions on screen.               
- More than one language IME can be installed on the same client machine.
- Requirements are Windows 7/Vista/XP 32-bit/64-bit operating systems.
- Only one instance of IME will be installed per machine but the               configuration is done for each user using IME.
   
   
   
Uninstall
To uninstall, follow these steps:
- Click on the "Start" menu.
- Select "Control Panel" and then go to "Add or Remove Programs".
- In the program list, select the "Google Input" , click on "Change/Remove" button.
- By default, "Retain my personal data with settings" option will be checked, which will not clean your personal customizations like display font, user correction cache etc., as part of uninstall. Uncheck the option, if you want to clean all your personal settings information.
- In the "Uninstall Google Input" dialog box, click "Yes".
   
 If you want to use IME with any application like notepad, you must first open the application and then open our IME. IME can be opened by clicking on the language bar on the desktop and then selecting the IME language icon or through a shortcut key if it's already configured. To close IME, you can change the language in language bar or try right clicking on the current application to see whether it supports 'Close IME' popup menu option or by closing the current application.
            Displaying Language Bar
            
-              In desktop, right click on tool bar and select Toolbars ->             Language bar            
   
Enabling Language Bar
If the 'Language bar' option is not visible in 'Toolbars', then it needs to be enabled through control panel:
Windows 7/Vista
- Control Panel -> Regional and Language Options -> Keyboard and Languages tab
- Click on Change keyboards... button to open Text services and input languages dialog
- Navigate to Language Bar tab
- Enable the radio button Docked in the taskbar under Language Bar section
- Apply all settings and try to display language bar as mentioned in previous section.
- Go to Control Panel -> Regional and Language Options -> Languages tab -> Text services and input languages (Details) -> Advanced Tab
- Make sure that under System configuration, option Turn off advanced text services is NOT checked.
- Go to Control Panel -> Regional and Language Options -> Languages tab -> Text services and input languages (Details) -> Settings Tab
- Click Language Bar
- Select Show the Language bar on the desktop. Click OK.
- If you are installing the IME for East Asian language or Right-To-Left language, go to Control Panel -> Regional and Language Options -> Languages Tab
- Make sure that options Install files for complex scripts and right to left languages and Install files for East Asian languages are checked in the checkboxes. This requires installation of system files and the system will prompt to insert the Operating System Disc.
- Apply all settings and try to display language bar as mentioned in previous section.
IME Shortcut
A shortcut key sequence can be applied to the IME as follows which can be used to quickly enable IME for any in-focus application:
Windows 7/Vista
- Control Panel -> Regional and Language Options -> Keyboard and Languages tab
- Click on Change keyboards... button to open Text services and input languages dialog
- Navigate to Advanced Key Settings tab
-  If Google Input is not listed in Installed Services box, then click Add and in Add Input language dialog box, go to the language for which you want to enable IME in the languages tree and expand the node. Check the checkbox next to GoogleInput in the list.
- In Hot keys for input languages Select To - Google Input 
- Press Change Key Sequence
- Select Enable Key Sequence
- Select option like Left ALT + SHIFT + Key 1
- Apply all changes
- Now opening an application like notepad and pressing Left ALT + SHIFT + Key 1 should open the IME.
- Control Panel -> Regional and Language Options -> Languages tab -> Text services and input languages (Details) -> Settings Tab
-  If either or Google Input not listed in Installed Services box, then click Add and in Add Input language dialog box, selectin Input language and Google Input in Keyboard layout/IME. Click OK
- Press Key Settings
-  In Hot keys for input languages, Select Switch to -Google Input 
- Press Change Key Sequence
- Select Enable Key Sequence
- Select option like Left ALT + SHIFT + Key 1
- Apply all changes
- Now opening an application like notepad and pressing Left ALT + SHIFT + Key 1 should open the IME.
Status Window
           
            Whenever you enable our IME for an application either  through a shortcut or through language bar, its status window will be  visible on the screen. By default it will be placed at the bottom right  corner of your desktop which can also be moved around. It is used for  more configuration and controlling various features of our IME. It has  three to five icons (depending on the language and features available)  with leftmost being the application icon. Next to it are IME language  indicator button, keyboard button (not present for Amharic and  Tigrinya), canonical mode button (This button will be present if you  have any canonical schemes associated with the IME) and menu button in that order.
 
Edit Window
           
            When the IME is enabled for an application like notepad and  you start typing, IME displays the edit window with the typed text and  the corresponding word choices in IME language. In the below example,  user has typed 'googl' and the IME has displayed five choices numbered 1 to 5.
 
Navigation and Selection
           
By default the leftmost choice will be highlighted indicating active choice. Active choice can be changed by navigating other choices through BOTTOM-ARROW or TAB key - which moves the selection to the right; or through UP-ARROW or SHIFT+TAB keys - which moves the selection to left. To select one of the choices as the new word for your application, use ENTER key which inserts the active choice to the application at its current cursor position. Using SPACE or any other PUNCTUATION CHARACTER  also inserts the active choice to the application along with the typed  punctuation character. Exception will be when IME thinks that there is a  better choice of word containing the punctuation character as part of  the word itself. All the above controls only insert the active choice  (highlighted) into the application. Another way to insert any choice  even if it is not active is using its position number as: CTRL+
 
Word Completions
           
When you type a word, the choices displayed in edit window will be either in BLACK or BLUE color. Intuitive partial word choices for the typed content are displayed in BLACK color which will always be grouped on the left side. If there are any better dictionary-based word completions for the typed content, they are displayed in BLUE color and grouped on the right side.
Paging
           
In the example being discussed, IME displays only 5 choices in the edit window which is the page size setting of the edit window. It can be configured through the menu button of the status window. If there are more choices than the page size set, then it will be displayed in the next page. Page navigation can be done through the small arrow buttons at the right bottom corner of the edit window or through PageUP and PageDown keys. Even when you navigate the choices with arrow or tab keys, the control moves to the next or previous page from either end of the edit window.
 
Search
           
            At anytime while typing in edit window, if you click the             Google image on top right corner of the edit window, it triggers a             web search for the active/highlighted choice in google.com. Search             can also be triggered for non-active choice by right-clicking on             any choice and then clicking the Search... drop-down button. 
 
User Cache
           
There will be scenarios where the leftmost choice is not the one you are looking for and you select some other choice (second choice in the below example for typed word 'program') which will be inserted into the application.
 
IME remembers this selection for the current user and when the user next types 'program' again, the last selected choice will now be displayed as the leftmost choice. To share this information across all applications for a user, this is persisted at user level even after closing the application.  But this persisting behavior can be disabled through the 'Disable User Cache' option from menu button of status window. Note that caching doesn't apply if you select word completions. It is only for word choices shown in BLACK color. 
 
Switch to English
           
If you want to add both roman alphabet (typically English) content and IME language content to any application, there is an easy way to switch between the two. In one mode IME gives you choices in its language and in another mode it just emits what you have typed. Toggling can be done by clicking the IME language button in status window or through shortcuts: CTRL+G or F12. 
 
Keyboard
           
When you don't get some words as expected choices for any rare complex words; you can use the flexible keyboard to input any possible word. You can open the keyboard by clicking the keyboard button on status window or through the shortcut CTRL+K. Mouse is used to enter characters from the IME keyboard which also triggers word completions in the edit window. Keyboard can be closed by clicking the keyboard button again on status window or through shortcut keys: CTRL+K or ESC. There is also option to enter Zero Width Joiner (ZWJ) and Zero Width Non Joiner (ZWNJ) characters. 
 
Customization
           
You can customize many features through IME's menu. Options available through the menu popup in status window are: 
- Change or activate one of the available canonical schemes (Option available only if there is atleast one scheme in the Schemes directory).
- Select the font and size to be used to display the choices in IME language inside edit window (Suggestion Font).
- Select the font and size to be used to display the English/Roman characters inside edit window.
- Set the page size for edit window to restrict its size through number of choices.
- Enable or disable the persistence of user cache.
- Add/Edit or Delete macros using Manage Macros option.
- Information about the IME like version.
- Help, linking to this page.
 
Special Cases
           
There are some special cases in how IME behaves for some characters in some languages: 
- Example in Arabic for special case of SPACE where it is part of the typed   word.
   
- Example in Arabic for special case of PUNCTUATION where it is part of the   typed word.
   
- Example in Greek for special case of CAPITALIZATION where only first   character being in uppercase in input retains its casing.
   
- Example in Greek for special case of CAPITALIZATION where all uppercase   word in input retains its casing.
   
- Example in Greek for special case of DIGITS where number is converted   digit wise instead of its whole value.
   
IME supports adding custom user defined macros. Macros are short character sequences mapped to a word of your choice. When you type a character sequence, if there is a word corresponding to that sequence in the user-defined macros collection then it will be shown as the first choice in the Edit Window. You can manage the macros by choosing the 'Manage Macros...' option from the IME's menu.

When you select this option the 'Manage Macros' dialog opens, allowing you to add, modify and delete the set of macros.
 
Adding a Macro entry
Click on the 'Add' button. This will add an empty row to the Macros List. You can double click (or select the cell and press F2) on the cell to add the new Macro entry.
- Macro Text should consist of only alpha-numeric characters and the length should not exceed 100 characters. Macro Text is case-sensitive.
- Macro Target should not contain any spaces and the length should not exceed 50 characters.
Removing a Macro entry
Select the cells you want to delete (Use Shift+Click to select a range or Ctrl+Click to select multiple disconnnected cells) and click on the 'Delete' button. Note that you cannot delete single cells. If you delete a cell, the full row will be deleted.
Modifying and Saving Macro Entries
- You can edit any cell by double clicking it (or selecting the cell and pressing F2 key).
- You can cancel the edit anytime by pressing the 'Esc' key or clicking outside the cell. Press the 'Enter' key to complete the edit.
- After all edits are completed you need to click on the 'Save' button to save your changes.
- You can click on the 'Discard' button anytime to discard all the changes made so far (after the previous save action).
Once you have the Macros in place you can use them while typing. For example if 'Mon' is mapped to  in the Macros, then when you type 'Mon' you will see
 in the Macros, then when you type 'Mon' you will see  as the first option.
 as the first option.
 
Transliteration IME supports adding custom transliteration schemes. Defining a scheme is done in a text file with a .scm extension. Once the scheme file is created you need to place it in the Schemes directory and when you start the IME the next time, it will automatically pick up the scheme files and provide you a menu option to choose one of the available schemes.
 
Defining Schemes
The Scheme files (.scm files) are text files and you can use your favourite text editor to edit them. The scheme file can be saved as UTF-8 text or UTF-16 text. A scheme file consists of two parts, header and the mapping rules section.
- Header
 
 The scheme file header specifies multiple attributes. A sample header with all the attributes will look like,version: 1.0 name: ITRANS using classes class-delimiters: [ ] wildcard: # stop-char: _- version is a mandatory field. Currently we only support 1.0.
- name is a mandatory field. The name specifies the name of the canonical scheme. The name should not contain more than 30 characters. This is the name displayed in the 'Schemes' menu. So a name descriptive of the scheme is useful. Here in the above example, the Name is set to 'ITRANS' indicating this scheme file implmenents ITRANS scheme (one of the popular schemes for Indic languages).
- using classes is an optional line. Having this line will give you the ability to use classes (grouping of mappings under common name). Classes are explained below.
- wildcard is an optional field. Wildcards are used in conjunction with classes
- class-delimiters is an optional field. These are used in conjunction with classes.
- stop-char is an optional field. The canonical transliteration engine by default looks for the longest prefix, matching a rule. If the user wants to break it in the middle, then a Stop char should be be used. For example, if 'a', 'i' and 'ai' all have valid mappings and user wants the engine to output mapping for 'a' followed by mapping for 'i', this can only be done by using the input sequence 'a_i' assuming '_' is the stop-char (using 'ai' will lead to the mapping for 'ai' and not what user expected).
 
- Class specification
 
 You can define mutiple classes in your scheme file if you have specified the using classes line in the header. A class definition should look like,classThe class-begin-delimiter, and class-end-delimiter are the ones specified in the header as mentioned above,... rules class-delimiters:If you have not specified class-delimiters in the header (but using classes is defined) then '{' and '}' are used as the default class delimiters. The rule specification inside a class is same as rule specification outside the class.
 
- Rule specification
 
 Rules are specified as,Rule prefix can consist of a sequence of ASCII characters and optionally a class specifier. A class specifier inside a rule should be of the form,If the Rule prefix has a class specifier, then the Rule target should use the wildcard. Rule Target consists of a sequence of characters in the target language of user's choice and a wildcard (when the Rule Prefix has a class specifier). The wildcard character is the one specified in the header as,name> wildcard:If no wildcard is specified in the header (but using classes is defined) '*' is used as the wildcard by default. A sample scheme file with a class (headers omitted),class sample { a 1 b 2 c 3 } a{sample} 1* {sample}x *2 ad 14 vd 24When the rules are processed each occurence of the class in the Rule Prefix is replaced by the prefixes defined in the class and the '*' (wildcard) in the target is replaced by the corresponding target in the class. So in the above example the rules get expanded into,aa 11 ab 12 ac 13 ax 12 bx 22 cx 32 ad 14 bd 24The first three rules correspond to the first rule in the rule file, the next three rules are for the second rule and the last two rules are same as the last two rules in the file because it does not use any class specifiers (Note that the rules inside the class are not added to the set of rules for the scheme). Now if you use this scheme file and type "abaxcxad", you will get the suggestion as "12123214" in the IME Window. If you are not using classes the scheme file is just a set of rules with the version and name specified in the header.
 Example of a scheme file with no classes,version: 1.0 name: Sample r1 target1 r2 target2 r3 target3Now when you use this Scheme file and type the sequence "r1r2r3" you will see the word "target1target2target3" as the suggested option.
Integrating Scheme file with IME
To integrate the scheme file with the IME, place the scheme file (with extension .scm) under the Schemes directory. The Schemes directory is present under the IME installation directory (It is usually under C:/Program Files/Google/Google
- Selecting the scheme from the Schemes menu.
- Using the shortcut key Ctrl+M (If there are multiple schemes this will activate the last used Scheme or the first scheme if you are using Schemes for the first time)
- Using the 'Toggle Canonical Scheme' button in the Status Window.
Your feedback is important and will help us improve               the product. You can send your comments to transliteration-support+ime@
I do not see the language toolbar.
                    >>> Check configuration section.                     
The word I want does not appear in any of the choices. 
>>> In case the word you are trying to type does not appear                          in the list of choices in all pages, you can use the                          Keyboard.                          
I see only boxes as choices. No character in IME                       language is displayed in edit widow. 
>>> Make sure that you have installed a Unicode font like Arial Unicode MS supporting IME language and customize a font through IME menu.                  
How to update to a newer version? 
>>> Google IME automatically updates to a newer version when  one is released. The update process happens silently, whether or not  you're using the IME at the time. If Google IME is open at the time of  the update, you must close the IME and restart the system for the new  version to take effect.                  
 
 
 
              
  
            
    
    
    
    
  
