>Though I don't know how IIIMF is good or bad, I don't know any
>alternatives which can input Chinese and Japanese. I agree that
>UTF-16 is a bad choice but it is not fatal, while no possibilites
>of support for Chinese and Japanese (any keymap-like approach can
>never support these languages) is fatal.
Do you know of any non-graphical input support for japanese?
I was wondering if such software exists:
- a text-terminal (non X, non-gui) japanese input method system
- a batch kanji picker:
its easy to take a quantity of roomaji and turn them
into
kana, but is there a command line tool, or anything
which
could take kana and produce kanji's?
That would be an interesting program, imo. If I were to
mess
around with such a tool, which input service would you
reccomend for japanese, with a preference for freer
software
(Canna, Wnn, etc)
--
Linux-UTF8: i18n of Linux on all levels
Archive: http://mail.nl.linux.org/linux-utf8/
- Re: Linux and UTF8 filenames Pablo Saratxaga
- Re: Linux and UTF8 filenames Glenn Maynard
- Re: Linux and UTF8 filenames Michael B. Allen
- Re: Linux and UTF8 filenames Andries . Brouwer
- RE: Linux and UTF8 filenames Maiorana, Jason
- Re: Linux and UTF8 filenames Tomohiro KUBOTA
- Re: Linux and UTF8 filenames Edward Cherlin
- Re: Linux and UTF8 filenames seer26
- Re: Linux and UTF8 filenames David Starner
- Re: Linux and UTF8 filenames Hideki Hiura
- Re: Linux and UTF8 filenames Maiorana, Jason
- Re: Linux and UTF8 filenames Mike Fabian
- Re: Linux and UTF8 filenames Tomohiro KUBOTA
- RE: Linux and UTF8 filenames Maiorana, Jason
- Re: Linux and UTF8 filenames Bruno Haible
- Re: Linux and UTF8 filenames Pablo Saratxaga
- Re: Linux and UTF8 filenames Keld J�rn Simonsen
- Re: Linux and UTF8 filenames Glenn Maynard
