
To learn how to change the Control Strip, see Customize the Touch Bar.Hancom Office Viewer is the program which opens and manages the document based on Hancom Office Use the Touch Bar: If your Mac has a Touch Bar and you customized the Control Strip by adding the Input Sources button, tap the button, then tap a Korean input source. To check your settings in Keyboard preferences, choose Apple menu > System Preferences, click Keyboard, then click Keyboard. Use the Fn key or : If you set an option in Keyboard preferences to change input sources by using the Fn key or (if available on the keyboard), press the key to display a list of your input sources, then continue pressing the key until the input source you want is selected. To check your settings in Input Sources preferences, choose Apple menu > System Preferences, click Keyboard, then click Input Sources. Use the Caps Lock key: If you set an option in Input Sources preferences to use the Caps Lock key to change input sources, press the key to switch between a non-Latin input source (such as Korean) and a Latin input source (such as English). You can also press Option-Control-Space bar to select the next input source in the Input menu, or Control-Space bar to select the previous input source. If an input source is dimmed, the current app doesn’t support it.

Use the Input menu: Click the Input menu in the menu bar, then choose a Korean input source. In an app on your Mac, do any of the following to choose one of the Korean input sources. For example, the M key corresponds to “ ㅁ” in Hangul.Īfter you set up a Korean input source, you can switch to it and start typing Korean characters. You can use the English letter that corresponds to the pronunciation of each Hangul letter. HNC Romaja: Follows the romanizing orthography of Haansoft Inc. GongjinCheong Romaja: Follows the standard romanizing orthography of GongjinCheong. This is the default input source for Hangul in macOS.ģ-Set Korean: Supports 3-set Hangul input used with the Gong Byung-Woo keyboard layout.ģ90 Sebulshik: Follows the general rules of 3-set Korean and supports the same input source for special characters as the English keyboard.

On your Mac, choose Apple menu > System Preferences, click Keyboard, then click Input Sources.Ĭlick the Add button, select Korean (on the left), then select any of the following:Ģ-Set Korean: Vowels are on the right side of the keyboard, and consonants on the left.
