Multilingual typing (as someone who writes EN, PT and dabbles on DE and NL daily, having to check which language I'm on and switch keyboards/layouts every time sucks)
I downloaded it using Droid-ify. It's like F-droid without the F-droid drama, which i forgot the details of. Someone convinced me to switch and it was painless.
Since I run GrapheneOS, I just install any keyboard I like, and deny it network access in the permissions panel to disable any privacy invading features.
I would rather be running a fully open source keyboard, so I'll be watching this thread for better solutions.
This is what I've done too. I've tried a bunch of other keyboards from F-Droid, but haven't been 100% happy with any of them. So I'm using GBoard still with all network permissions disabled.
Does it work like Nokia's old keyboard where you could press a key once and it would approximate the word you're typing from the letters contained within each key?
No. You press for the letter that is in the middle of the key and for the other letters you have to swipe. If the letter "p" is in the top right corner of the middle key you have to swipe to the top right corner. It takes some getting used to, but one-handed typing is much faster with this keyboard.
I used to use Swiftkey for a long while and switched to AnySoftKeyboard 2 years ago and for single language Swype capable keyboard it's the best replacement I've found.
It's what I use too, best open-source option I've found, but I've had Android complain about it using CPU in the background sporadically.
I also wish that it had support for arbitrary Unicode input and the ability to modify the keyboard on-the-fly in the UI, add keys and pop-up menus linked to user-specified characters and sequences of text.
I personally use an expected keyboard. Really nice, especially if you use termux. FCITX5 for Android is another good keyboard if you like the more AOSP style keyboard that supports other characters
Yay for Unexpected! I was really surprised when I found out just how many keyboard shortcuts it supports. I find myself using the keyboard-based text selection/copy/cut/paste/cursor-movement/etc more often than the "normal" way. It's also a great help when using Termux or generally writing code.
Looks like I have some keyboards to try out. I'll try sample all of these but I'll probably fall on one I like and not think about moving on from there
I used Hacker's Keyboard for years and I loved it. A few years ago, I switched to Dvorak, and the Dvorak implemention in Hacker's Keyboard is weird and awkward to use (I think, anyway). I've been using HeliBoard recently, which is still pretty new; it's a fork of OpenBoard which is no longer maintained. I think as long as HeliBoard keeps working as well as it has been, I'll keep using it forever, honestly. I would say it's basically like getting to have Gboard except also FOSS.
I just switched to HeliBoard. I was using OpenBoard, but I don't think it was getting updated. The worst part of OpenBoard was it would autocorrect email addresses, so it would turn myemailaddress@gmail.com into "my email address mail come" or something, and if I forgot to hit delete right after it did so, there was no way to undo the autocorrect. HeliBoard seems to recognize the @ and stop autocorrecting it.
I just discovered that HeliBoard has an undo button! I can't count how many times I've deleted whole sentences or paragraphs by accident while editing a large block of text.
It has a bunch of other new features and preferences that OpenBoard doesn't have. For instance, you can swipe up/down from the keyboard in the same way you can swipe left and right to move the cursor.
Does anyone know a keyboard where you swipe up on a letter to capaitalize and swipe down on it to do the underlying number/symbol? That's what I've got at the moment on my keyboard, but it was removed from the play store years ago, so would like to move on
I just got swiping to work in Heliboard, which is nice. Works and looks just like Gboard. You just have to go to the advanced settings, scroll all the way to the bottom, then load the required library manually.
This is a direct link to the library if you have an ARM 64bit v8 phone. Otherwise, you can find different version in that same repo, I think. Just use the 3-dot menu to download it: