The easiest and most reliable way to do this is to use a Chinese session, you can enable that in the languages section of the menu.
If you have to use an English (or other language session) it is a bit more difficult to get working properly - it is normally open office that is the hardest to get working. You will need to install some extra packages, go into synaptic package manager and find: scim scim-gtk2-immodule You will also need some input method packages, read the descriptions and choose the ones you like, you may consider: scim-pinyin scim-tables-zh I have found the easiest way to get it working is with another package called im-switch After installing all of that, go to a terminal and type: $ sudo im-switch -z all_ALL -s scim This means all your programs will get their input, for all languages, from the scim program. There maybe more elegant ways to do this, but this is simple and it should work. If you need more chinese fonts, they are also available from synaptic, look for the ttf-arphic packages and choose the ones you like. I haven't done this for a while so I might have forgotten a few steps, but will be installing a new box on the weekend, I'll give you an update if I left anything out. You may like to look at http://www.ubuntu.org.cn/ (or .tw) if you prefer working in Chinese. Andrew On Thu, 2007-05-03 at 20:54 +0800, Odiva Hasanuddin wrote: > i am just use edubuntu...i want know..use what i can typing chinnese > chracter..cause...i am usually use chinnese write leteer and > prensentation thanks -- edubuntu-users mailing list [email protected] Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/edubuntu-users
