> 1. Most IMEs in Traditional Windows 2000 can support TC and SC > directly without switching, even they can let the user type in > Japanese characters without switching. It is not unusual for one IME > to support all, or as many as possible, Unicode characters if the system [snip]
On Windows, you install 2 IME, one for TC and the other for SC. You toggle between these two while you key in. > 2. In cases of "Taiwan" and "Taipei", the TC and SC characters for the > first character "Tai", U53F0 and U81FA, are both widely and > interchangeably used in Taiwan. You can find examples of mixed uses > in Chinese Web sites, such as TAIpei City Government, National They are both Traditional form one is T-T, the other is T-S. Both exist on a TC IME. I can understand the big problem of TC and SC domain names. I am not too sure of the problem of "mixed TC & SC" identifiers. Please do provide some statistic if you can. Thanks. -James Seng
