Re: [gentoo-user] -unicode USE flag

2006-05-13 Thread Richard Fish

On 5/13/06, Mark Knecht [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Hi,
   I wonder if anyone could explain the USE flag 'unicode' better than
the Gentoo description located here:

http://www.gentoo.org/dyn/use-index.xml

unicode Adds support for Unicode

   I think the person who wrote this knows too much. ;-)


Or figured the reader would know how to use google... :-)

http://www.unicode.org/standard/WhatIsUnicode.html

-Richard

--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [gentoo-user] -unicode USE flag

2006-05-13 Thread Bo Andresen
On Saturday 13 May 2006 18:59, Mark Knecht wrote:
What is unicode and why might an end user want it or need it?

http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/utf-8.xml

-- 
Bo Andresen


pgpDwUrn2UPqp.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: [gentoo-user] -unicode USE flag

2006-05-13 Thread Mark Knecht

On 5/13/06, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

On 5/13/06, Mark Knecht [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Hi,
I wonder if anyone could explain the USE flag 'unicode' better than
 the Gentoo description located here:

 http://www.gentoo.org/dyn/use-index.xml

 unicode Adds support for Unicode

I think the person who wrote this knows too much. ;-)

Or figured the reader would know how to use google... :-)

http://www.unicode.org/standard/WhatIsUnicode.html

-Richard


That much I did before writing. There are lots of similar sites. Thanks.

However, being a musican and not a computer scientist all of that is
mostly gibberish to lower life forms such as myself. The unicode flag
possibility shows up on some new emerges for fonts. I suppose they are
then fonts that use 16-bits instead of whatever they use when I don't
include the unicaode flag. All that stated, then question still
arises, why would I want these on my system?

Thanks,
Mark

--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [gentoo-user] -unicode USE flag

2006-05-13 Thread Max Lorenz

Hi,

On 5/13/06, Mark Knecht [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Hi,
   I wonder if anyone could explain the USE flag 'unicode' better than
the Gentoo description located here:

http://www.gentoo.org/dyn/use-index.xml

unicode Adds support for Unicode

   I think the person who wrote this knows too much. ;-)

   What is unicode and why might an end user want it or need it?


This guide explains it pretty good:
http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/utf-8.xml



Thanks,
Mark


HTH,
Max

--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [gentoo-user] -unicode USE flag

2006-05-13 Thread Jim

Mark Knecht wrote:

On 5/13/06, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

On 5/13/06, Mark Knecht [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Hi,
I wonder if anyone could explain the USE flag 'unicode' better than
 the Gentoo description located here:

 http://www.gentoo.org/dyn/use-index.xml

 unicode Adds support for Unicode

I think the person who wrote this knows too much. ;-)

Or figured the reader would know how to use google... :-)

http://www.unicode.org/standard/WhatIsUnicode.html

-Richard


That much I did before writing. There are lots of similar sites. Thanks.

However, being a musican and not a computer scientist all of that is
mostly gibberish to lower life forms such as myself. The unicode flag
possibility shows up on some new emerges for fonts. I suppose they are
then fonts that use 16-bits instead of whatever they use when I don't
include the unicaode flag. All that stated, then question still
arises, why would I want these on my system?


Do you speak languages other then English?  If so, that is where Unicode 
can come in.  It can handle a lot more characters then just the English 
alphabet.


I only speak and read English and have no need for those funny 
characters so I built my systems with a global use flag of -unicode.


It won't hurt to include Unicode.  Basically if you want to work with 
any language other then English, just enable Unicode.



Thanks,
Mark


Jim
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [gentoo-user] -unicode USE flag

2006-05-13 Thread Philip Webb
060513 Mark Knecht wrote:
 being a musican and not a computer scientist,
 I suppose they are fonts that use 16-bits
 instead of whatever they use when I don't include the unicode flag.
 the question still arises, why would I want these on my system?

If you confine yourself entirely to English, French, German  Spanish,
you shouldn't need Unicode; if you extend to Russian, Welsh or Esperanto,
you will find it useful when switching between those languages  English.
That's briefly, as you are requesting (smile).

-- 
,,
SUPPORT ___//___,  Philip Webb : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ELECTRIC   /] [] [] [] [] []|  Centre for Urban  Community Studies
TRANSIT`-O--O---'  University of Toronto
-- 
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list



Re: [gentoo-user] -unicode USE flag

2006-05-13 Thread Mark Knecht

On 5/13/06, Jim [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Mark Knecht wrote:
 On 5/13/06, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On 5/13/06, Mark Knecht [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Hi,
 I wonder if anyone could explain the USE flag 'unicode' better than
  the Gentoo description located here:
 
  http://www.gentoo.org/dyn/use-index.xml
 
  unicode Adds support for Unicode
 
 I think the person who wrote this knows too much. ;-)

 Or figured the reader would know how to use google... :-)

 http://www.unicode.org/standard/WhatIsUnicode.html

 -Richard

 That much I did before writing. There are lots of similar sites. Thanks.

 However, being a musican and not a computer scientist all of that is
 mostly gibberish to lower life forms such as myself. The unicode flag
 possibility shows up on some new emerges for fonts. I suppose they are
 then fonts that use 16-bits instead of whatever they use when I don't
 include the unicaode flag. All that stated, then question still
 arises, why would I want these on my system?

Do you speak languages other then English?


No, I barely speak English actually


If so, that is where Unicode
can come in.  It can handle a lot more characters then just the English
alphabet.


OK, so I thought that was what I was accomplishing that with the cjk
flag and by adding UTF8 to my kernel .config file. There is one place
I have required this support in the past. I have digitized my complete
CD collection and found that a number of CDs had special accents on
(mostly) French and German names. However it seemed that adding the
stuff I speak of was enough. POssibly it was just enough to get by?



I only speak and read English and have no need for those funny
characters so I built my systems with a global use flag of -unicode.

It won't hurt to include Unicode.  Basically if you want to work with
any language other then English, just enable Unicode.


I guess I'll look more deeply into it.

Thanks,
Mark





--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list