( function ( $ ) { 'use strict'; var defs = { id: 'da-normforms', name: 'Dansk', description: 'Danish input method with most common form transliterated', date: '2012-12-04', URL: 'http://www.evertype.com/alphabets/danish.pdf', author: 'John Erling Blad', license: 'GPLv3', version: '1.0', contextLength: 1, maxKeyLength: 3, patterns: [ // The most common transliterations [ 'aa', 'å' ], [ 'AA', 'Å' ], [ 'Aa', 'Å' ], [ 'ae', 'æ' ], [ 'AE', 'Æ' ], [ 'Ae', 'Æ' ], [ 'oe', 'ø' ], [ 'OE', 'Ø' ], [ 'Oe', 'Ø' ], // The previous as negated transliterations, mostly for names [ 'åa', 'a', 'aa' ], [ 'ÅA', 'A', 'AA' ], [ 'Åa', 'A', 'Aa' ], [ 'åA', 'a', 'aA' ], [ 'æe', 'e', 'ae' ], [ 'ÆE', 'E', 'AE' ], [ 'Æe', 'E', 'Ae' ], [ 'æE', 'e', 'aE' ], [ 'øe', 'e', 'oe' ], [ 'ØE', 'E', 'OE' ], [ 'Øe', 'E', 'Oe' ], // this fails for some names like "Øen" [ 'øE', 'e', 'oE' ] // historically similar forms // "Å" is sometimes written as "Aa", and "å" as "aa", but in names // it is not generally acceptable to use this transliteration. To // handle those situations we need some oposite forms. // There is a similar character "Å" for the length unit Angstrom, // but this is not the upper case letter Å. ] }; $.ime.register( defs ); }( jQuery ) );