Operation Manual
2
Enter the gesture you would like to use for a character into the respective character's
cell. With the rst input, the background changes its color to white, whereas the
character itself is shown in light gray. Repeat the gesture multiple times until the
character changes its color to black. Untrained characters are shown on a light gray
or brown background (depending on the desktop's color scheme).
3
Repeat this step until you have trained CellWriter for all characters you need.
4
If you want to train CellWriter for another language, click the Setup button and select
a language from the Languages tab. Close the conguration dialog. Click the Train
button and select the key map from the drop-down box at the bottom right corner of
the CellWriter window. Now repeat your training for the new map of keys.
5
After having nished the training for the map of keys, click the Train button to
switch to the normal mode.
In the normal mode, the CellWriter windows shows a couple of empty cells in which
to enter the gestures. The characters are not sent to another application until you click
the Enter button, so you can correct or delete characters before you use them as input.
Characters that have been recognized with a low degree of condence will appear
highlighted. To correct your input, use the context menu that appears on right-clicking
a cell. To delete a character, either use your pen's eraser, or middle-click with the mouse
to clear the cell. After nishing your input in CellWriter, dene which application
should receive the input by clicking into the application's window. Then send the input
to the application by clicking Enter.
Figure 26.2:
Gesture Recognition with CellWriter
If you click the Keys button in CellWriter, you get a virtual keyboard that can be used
instead of the handwriting recognition.
To hide CellWriter, close the CellWriter window. The application now appears as icon
in your system tray. To show the input window again, click the icon in the system tray.
Using Tablet PCs 473










