On 09/23/2000 10:45:13 AM "Carl W. Brown" wrote:
Microsoft has chosen not to create and new code pages for new languages.
Unfortunately for you these languages are the Indian languages. They
added
these language to Windows 2000 in Unicode only. They are not available on
Windows 98 or Windows
From: Keld Jorn Simonsen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, September 26, 2000 3:29 AM
A draft of 15897 is available at
http://www.dkuug.dk/jtc1/sc22/wg20/docs/n712.pdf
Locales can be found at http://www.dkuug.dk/i18n/WG15-collection/locales
These are POSIX ISO/IEC 9945-2 locales.
Some
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, September 26, 2000 8:21 AM
Not true. Windows 9x has always supported APIs for drawing text using
Unicode-encoded strings. Uniscribe and OpenType are available on Win9x/Me,
and if you had OT Devanagari fonts and the appropriate
Correct, but SA Word 2000 uses a slightly different dll to do the job (it
sits in saext.dll). I was told that it ships in all versions for Word 10 by
a usually reliable source who might be able to chip in with a more thorough
explanation of what this dll does for Word that goes beyond the MS
On 09/26/2000 11:11:11 AM cowan wrote:
Expecting to get good results on non-Thai Windows with Thai text is
probably
asking too much, at least for a while.
Indeed, but Word2000 on Win98 doesn't even give contextual forms and
diacritic positioning.
- Peter
And you're both correct. The code to handle Thai exists only in the "South
Asian" version of Word2000, or Thai Word2000, which is the same executable
as the South Asian version. All other versions of Word2000 use a different
(shared) executable. So you can really say there are two versions of
From: "Chris Pratley" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
small footnote here
For whatever reason, it is pretty hard to obtain the
second [South Asia] one, since it sells only in
Thailand, India, and neighboring countries.
I have been able to arrange getting it to specific customers who ask through
their own
hi
actually i have been trying to use ASPs (UTF-8
encoding..) to write unicode cahracters to an Oracle DB table (varchar2
field)... and then retrieve them back..
(i used UTF-8 encoding for both writing to the
database and also for retriving and displaying..)
there were some amazing
8 matches
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