On Sunday 09 November 2003 22:11, mathieu perrenoud wrote: > On Sunday 09 November 2003 03:08, Jeff Ames wrote: > > > I've tried to launch kinput2 with different args > > > > I launch kinput2 as 'kinput2 -canna &' (make sure canna is running) > > > > > (process:11009): Gtk-WARNING **: Locale not supported by C library. > > > Using the fallback 'C' locale. > > > > Try 'locale -a | grep ja_JP' and see what you do have support for. Then > > to launch an application with Japanese input support, I think you only > > need to set LC_CTYPE. > > locale -a give me lots of locales (368) but no ja_JP.UTF-8 > how can I add support for this one?
There is a howto for this at forums.gentoo.org. > > Then you should be able to open an application and use Japanese by > > hitting the windows key. I know aterm and rxvt support Japanese... You > > might also want to check whether you have the 'cjk' USE flag set. > > thanks for the help. I had still to play with lots of config files, but now > everything is working. But for one small problem: every application started > with LC_CTYPE=ja_JP is displayed with a default cursive font. It's quite > nice but totally unusable! Not only kanjis and cannas are in cursive. Latin > characters also show up in cursive. I think it's an unicode font because > there are accentuated letters: ��� (and not squares). > I've tried to change fonts in kde, in xftconfig, XF86Config, acticvated / > desactived xfs. But still no cigar. > How do I choose the default font for kde? X? for unicode / japanese / > iso-latin, ... You can do some of that using qtconfig, but for the most part it depends on how your fonts are set up. More than likely you should use /etc/fonts. Jason -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
