Chinese typewriter

A Double Pigeon mechanical typewriter for Chinese from the 1970s. The characters can be assorted on the board and can be picked separately and then typed.

Typewriters that can type Chinese characters were invented in the early 20th century. Written Chinese is a logographic writing system, and facilitating the use of thousands of Chinese characters requires more complex engineering than for a writing system derived from the Latin alphabet, which may require only tens of glyphs.[1] An ordinary Chinese printing office uses 6,000 characters.[2] Models began to be mass-produced in the 1920s. Many early models were manufactured by Japanese companies, following the invention of the Japanese typewriter by Kyota Sugimoto, which use kanji adopted from the Chinese writing system.[3] At least sixty different models of Chinese typewriter have been produced, ranging from sizable mechanical models to electronic word processors.

  1. ^ Tsu 2010, pp. 49–79.
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference NYT1916 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ Mullaney 2017, pp. 204–212.

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