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Cake day: June 5th, 2025

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  • Fedora is a solid option as it uses IBus by default and ships the ibus-hangul package in its repositories. The KDE Plasma spin provides a Windows‑style taskbar and a very configurable input‑method switcher. To setup the keyboard in KDE, just run: sudo dnf install ibus-hangul

    Then open System Settings → Input Devices → Keyboard → Layouts. Click Add → Korean (Hangul). You can then set the shortcut (e.g., Ctrl + Space or Alt + Shift) under Advanced → Switching Policy.

    Plasma’s Keyboard Layout widget sits nicely on the panel, letting you toggle with a click—very similar to the Windows language bar.

    All in all, switching between English and Hangul is straightforward on most modern Linux distributions – you just need the right input‑method framework and a little configuration. You can also do similar setups with Ubuntu/Mint or openSUSE as well as HamoniKR.