Maliit
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Maliit is an input method framework for computers with particular focus on implementing virtual keyboards. Designed mostly for touchscreen devices, Maliit allows the inputting of text without the presence of a physical keyboard. More advanced features such as word correction and prediction are also available.
| Maliit | |
|---|---|
Maliit's virtual keyboard running on the Nokia N9 | |
| Original author | Nokia |
| Developers | Jan Arne Petersen and contributors[1] |
| Initial release | June 30, 2010[2] |
| Stable release | 2.3.0
/ July 6, 2022 |
| Written in | C++ |
| Operating system | Unix-like, Windows[3] |
| Platform | Qt |
| Available in | Multilingual |
| Type | Input method |
| License |
|
| Website | maliit |
Originating as part of MeeGo,[6] Maliit is free software licensed under LGPL. Maliit ships as a standard component of LG webOS,[7] Plasma Mobile,[8] SailfishOS,[9] LuneOS,[10][11] and Ubuntu Touch.[12]
History
Maliit was originally developed as part of MeeGo by Nokia who eventually shipped it as part of MeeGo Handset "Day 1" software platform.[2]
In the early 2010s, Maliit was deployed as a standard component of Nokia N9,[9] KDE Plasma Active,[13] OLPC devices,[9] and Ubuntu Touch phones.[9][14][15]
After the MeeGo project ended, Maliit was transferred into an independent project by free software consulting firm Openismus.[16] The first formally independent release was 0.80.0 on June 20, 2011.[17]
Maliit 0.99, released on March 27, 2013, switched from Qt 4 to Qt 5.[9]
In May 2016, a KDE developer announced that instead of Maliit, QtVirtualKeyboard had been integrated into KDE Plasma 5.7.[18][19] In September 2020, Maliit was made the default keyboard in Plasma Mobile.[20][8]
On April 2, 2021 Maliit 2.0 has been released.[21]