The present disclosure relates generally to handheld electronic devices employing a text disambiguation function, and more particularly, to a method that is executable on a handheld electronic device that facilitates capitalization of user inputs.
Due to their small form factor and mobile functionality, handheld electronic devices are increasingly becoming popular. Examples of such handheld electronic devices include, for instance, cellular phones, smart phones, personal data assistants (PDAs), handheld computers, two-way pagers, and the like. Many handheld electronic devices also feature wireless communication capability, although many such handheld electronic devices are stand-alone devices that are functional without communication with other devices.
Improvements in handheld electronic devices are desirable.
A full understanding of the present disclosure can be gained from the following Description of the Example Embodiments when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which like reference numerals denote like elements:
In one example embodiment, there is provided a method for facilitating input capitalization in a handheld electronic device having a text disambiguation function. The handheld electronic device includes a multi-directional navigation device, a display, and a keyboard having a plurality of keys, one or more of the keys having multiple characters associated therewith. The method comprises: receiving an ambiguous input resulting from a selection of a plurality of the keys, generating a plurality of possible inputs based on the ambiguous input using the text disambiguation function, displaying each of the possible inputs on the display, changing capitalization of at least one of the possible inputs based on a detected actuation of a capitalization key, and enabling selection of at least one of the capitalized possible inputs based on a directional input received from the multi-directional navigation device.
In another example embodiment, the present disclosure provides a handheld electronic device having a keyboard with a plurality of keys including a capitalization key, one or more of the keys having multiple characters associated therewith. The Handheld electronic device further includes a multi-directional navigation device, a display, a processor, and a memory storing one or more routines executable by the processor, the one or more routines implementing a text disambiguation function and being adapted to: receive an ambiguous input resulting from a selection of the plurality of the keys, generate a plurality of possible inputs based on the ambiguous input using the text disambiguation function, display each of the possible inputs on the display, change capitalization of at least one of the possible inputs based on a detected actuation of the capitalization key, and enable selection of at least one of the capitalized possible inputs based on a directional input received from the multi-directional navigation device.
Handheld electronic devices are generally intended to be portable, and thus are of a relatively compact configuration in which keys and other input structures often perform multiple functions under certain circumstances or may otherwise have multiple aspects or features assigned thereto. With advances in technology, handheld electronic devices are built to have progressively smaller form factors yet have progressively greater numbers of applications and features resident thereon. As a practical matter, the keys of a keyboard can only be reduced to a certain small size before the keys become relatively unusable. In order to enable text entry, however, a keyboard must be capable of entering all the alphabetic characters or letters associated with the input language, as well as digits, appropriate punctuation and symbols, and functions.
One way of providing numerous characters in a small space has been to provide a “reduced keyboard” in which multiple characters, symbols, and/or digits, and the like, are assigned to any given key. For example, a touch-tone telephone having a keypad layout pursuant the international standard ITU E.161 includes a reduced keyboard providing twelve keys, of which ten have digits thereon, and of these ten keys, eight have Roman characters assigned thereto. For instance, one of the keys includes the digit “2” as well as the characters “A”, “B”, and “C”. Since a single actuation of such a key potentially could be intended by the user to refer to any of the characters “A”, “B”, and “C”, and potentially could also be intended to refer to the digit “2”, the input (by actuation of the key) generally is an ambiguous input and is in need of some type of disambiguation in order to be useful for text entry purposes.
Other known reduced keyboards have included other arrangements of keys, characters, symbols, digits, functions and the like. One example of a reduced keyboard is the keyboard 20 having a plurality of keys 26 forming a part of the handheld electronic device 2 shown in
In order to enable a user to make use of the multiple characters, digits, and the like on any given key in an ambiguous keyboard, numerous keystroke interpretation systems have been provided. For instance, a “multi-tap” system allows a user to substantially unambiguously specify a particular character on a key by pressing the same key a number of times equivalent to the position of the desired character on the key.
Another example keystroke interpretation system would include key chording, of which various types exist. For instance, a particular character can be entered by pressing two keys in succession or by pressing and holding a first key while pressing a second key.
Still another example keystroke interpretation system would be a “press-and-hold/press-and-release” interpretation function in which a given key provides a first result if the key is pressed and immediately released, and provides a second result if the key is pressed and held for a short period of time.
Another keystroke interpretation system that has been employed is a text disambiguation function. In such a system, a user typically presses keys to which one or more characters have been associated, generally pressing each key one time for each desired character, and the disambiguation routine attempts to determine the appropriate input. Many such systems display an output component as the user is typing (pressing or actuating keys) that includes a list of possible input character strings that are generated by the disambiguation software. Numerous such systems have been proposed. One example of such a system is disclosed in commonly owned United States Patent Application No. 2006/0058995, entitled “Handheld Electronic Device With Text Disambiguation”.
There is room for Improvement in handheld electronic devices that employ keystroke interpretation systems or text disambiguation functions, and in particular there is a need for methods for facilitating user input in such handheld electronic devices.
Reference is now made to
The input apparatus 8 comprises a keyboard 20 and a multi-directional navigation device 24. The keyboard 20 in the example embodiment depicted herein comprises a plurality of keys 26 that are each actuatable to provide input to the processor apparatus 16. While the presently described example embodiment is directed to a physical keyboard 20, in alternate embodiments using a touchscreen display 32, a virtual keyboard is included. Many of the keys 26 each have a plurality of characters, i.e., linguistic elements, assigned thereto. For instance, one of the keys 26 has assigned thereto the characters “A” and “S”. Another of the keys 26 has assigned thereto the characters “Q” and “W”. The arrangement of characters of the example keyboard 20 is in a reduced QWERTY keyboard layout.
Some of the keys 26 are associated with functions such as “alt”, “spacebar”, “return”, “backspace” or “delete”, and “shift”. These keys 26 provide functions associated with text input, such as access to alternate characters associated with a key, as well test input commands such as deletion of a character. In the currently described example embodiment, key 26a is associated with the “shift” or capitalization function, thereby allowing input of capitalized characters in the handheld electronic device 2. Upon actuation of key 26a, an icon 14 is rendered on a display 32 to provide visual indication that the capitalization function is active during the current input session.
In the presently described example embodiment, the multi-directional navigation device 24 is a trackball 28; however, alternative mechanisms for providing similar multi-directional navigation may be used in place of the trackball 28, such as, without limitation, touchpad, thumbwheel, stylus, mouse, joystick, touch-sensitive display, and hard buttons disposed on the housing 6 of the handheld electronic device 2. The trackball 28 is rotatable to provide navigational and other input to the processor apparatus 16, and additionally is translatable in a direction inwardly toward the handheld electronic device 2 to provide other inputs, such as selection inputs. The trackball 28 is freely rotatable on the housing 6 and thus is able to provide navigational inputs in the vertical direction, i.e., the up-down direction, in the horizontal direction, i.e., the left-right (side to side) direction, as well as combinations thereof. In additional, the trackball 28 may be adapted to provide navigational inputs in diagonal directions. The keys 26 and the trackball 28 serve as input members which are actuatable to provide input to the processor apparatus 16.
The processor apparatus 16 comprises a processor 36 and a memory 40. The processor 36 may be, for example and without limitation, a microprocessor (μP) that interfaces with the memory 40. The memory 40 can be any one or more of a variety of types of internal and/or external storage media such as, without limitation, RAM, ROM, EPROM(s), EEPROM(s), FLASH, and the like that provide a storage register, i.e., a machine readable medium, for data storage such as in the fashion of an internal storage area of a computer, and can be volatile memory or nonvolatile memory. The memory 40 has stored therein a number of routines 44 that are executable on the processor 36. As employed herein, the expression “a number of” and variations thereof shall refer broadly to any nonzero quantity, including a quantity of one. One or more of the routines 44 implement a text disambiguation function that is operable to disambiguate ambiguous text input, such as when one or more of the keys 26 having a plurality of characters assigned thereto is actuated, and provide to the user a number of possible intended inputs that may be selected.
The processor apparatus 16 is coupled to an output apparatus 12 which comprises a display 32. Information, such as text, characters, symbols, images, icons, graphical user interfaces (GUIs) and other items that may be displayed or rendered on the handheld electronic device 2, is displayed on the display 32 via the processor apparatus 16.
Examples of handheld electronic device 2 include mobile, or portable, wireless communication devices such as pagers, cellular phones, smart-phones, wireless organizers, PDAs, wirelessly enabled notebook computers, net-books, tablet computers, and so forth. The handheld electronic device 2 may also be a portable electronic device without wireless communication capabilities, such as a handheld electronic game device, digital photograph album, digital camera, or other device. In the presently described embodiment, the handheld electronic device 2 has wireless communication capability. Communication functions, including data and voice communications, are performed through a communication subsystem apparatus 18. Data received by the handheld electronic device 2 is decompressed and decrypted by a decoder (not shown) that optionally resides in the communication subsystem apparatus 18. The communication subsystem apparatus 18 receives messages from and sends messages to a wireless network 30. The wireless network 30 may be any type of wireless network, including, but not limited to, data wireless networks, voice wireless networks, and networks that support both voice and data communications.
A problem associated with capitalizing text is that it is cumbersome for the user to capitalize text while typing on a handheld electronic device 2, as one finger (often the right thumb) has to maintain pressing the capitalization key 26a while other finger(s) (typically the left thumb) inputs capitalized characters to compose or input text. Maintaining activation of the capitalization key 26a during the entire duration of the text input session is not only inefficient for thumb-typing as one thumb is exclusively engaged in keeping the capitalization key 26a actuated, but also awkward for cradling the handheld electronic device 2 in one hand while typing with the other or when typing with one hand.
Moreover, when the user forgets to engage the capitalization key 26a prior to input capitalization and continues composing text, or if the user intends to change the capitalization when editing inputted text, the user has to delete the inputted text in its entirety then re-input while pressing the capitalization key 26a to obtain the appropriate capitalization.
The present disclosure seeks to address these problems by providing a method for facilitating input of capitalized characters during a text disambiguation input session. According to the present disclosure, capitalization infers shifting characters from lower case to upper case, or vice-versa.
One example embodiment of such method for facilitating input of capitalized characters during a text disambiguation input session is illustrated in connection with FIG. 3, which shows an example output screen 50 rendered on the display 32 of the handheld electronic device 2 of
As seen in
As seen in the example output screen 50 of
In the example embodiment shown in
The present disclosure seeks to facilitate input of capitalized characters during a text disambiguation input session using the capitalization key 26a to allow the user to change capitalization of the desired possible input in the variant component 54, or more easily capitalize the character being edited from the list of the displayed possible editing characters in a text editing session. Advantageously, the need to save or pre-load in memory 40 capitalized versions of words in the disambiguation software wordlist or dictionary is alleviated.
According to an aspect of the present disclosure described in example output screen 60 of
Upon actuation of the capitalization key 26a (Step 550), an icon 14 indicating capitalization input mode is rendered on display 32 (Step 560) and the capitalized version of the target possible input, namely “GPRS” in upper case, is now displayed in the variant component 64 as an additional possible input (Step 570) immediately underneath original “gprs” input. It is noted that actuation of the capitalization key 26a for a possible input in capitalized format (i.e. in upper case) causes the target possible input to convert capitalization (e.g. to lower case from upper case).
The user may now select the capitalized version of the target possible input (obtained at Step 570) or optionally any other possible input, by pressing the trackball 24 or other input committing key 26, such as “space” key or “enter” key (Step 580). Upon selection, the capitalized version of the target possible input is committed for inclusion in text component 62 (Step 590). User input of capitalized text is therefore simplified as less navigation and/or actuation steps are required to select a capitalized input.
By actuating the capitalization key 26a (Step 650), an icon 14 indicating capitalization input mode is shown on display 32 (Step 660) and the capitalized version of the target possible input in upper case format, namely “HORSE”, replaces the target possible input “horse” in the variant component 74 (Step 670) at the location where the original target possible input was initially located as illustrated in
Reference is now made to
While example embodiments have been described and illustrated above, it should be understood that these example embodiments are not to be considered as limiting. Additions, deletions, substitutions, and other modifications can be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the present disclosure. Accordingly, the disclosure is not to be considered as limited by the foregoing description but is only limited by the scope of the appended claims.