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tekeninput

Tekeninput is a form of human-computer interaction in which a pen-like device is used on a digital surface to create strokes that are captured by the device. It covers drawing, handwriting, annotation and signature capture, and is often used as an alternative or complement to keyboard and mouse input. In practice, tekeninput systems record the sequence of points that make up each stroke and may include data such as pressure, tilt, azimuth and timestamp. This enables not only the look of a stroke but also attributes that influence rendering and recognition, such as line width that varies with pressure or stroke dynamics.

Technologies and data: Several technologies enable tekeninput. Electromagnetic resonance (EMR) digitizers, used in Wacom-style tablets, detect

Hardware and standards: Popular ecosystems include Windows Ink on Windows devices, Apple Pencil on iPadOS, and

Applications and considerations: Tekeninput is widely used in digital art, note-taking, education, design, and forms with

the
pen
without
a
battery.
Capacitive,
pressure-sensitive
styluses
rely
on
the
touchscreen.
Many
devices
use
active
pens
connected
by
Bluetooth
or
a
native
protocol
and
provide
features
such
as
tilt
sensing,
palm
rejection,
and
low
latency.
Stroke
data
can
be
stored
as
vector
paths
or
as
samples,
and
may
be
passed
to
handwriting
recognition
and
ink
rendering
engines.
USI-compatible
pens
on
Chromebooks.
API
surfaces
such
as
Windows
Ink,
PencilKit
and
Android
stylus
support
define
how
apps
access
pressure,
tilt
and
other
pen
attributes.
signature
capture.
It
offers
a
natural
input
modality
and
high-precision
control,
but
depends
on
compatible
hardware,
software,
and
perceived
latency.
Costs,
calibration,
and
interoperability
can
affect
user
experience.