Your best bet is to use internationalization support in applications
themselves.  OpenBSD doesn't provide much on the base OS level, but most
applications have support for it.  Here's a site that provides a good
starting point for app level Unicode/i18n support:

http://eyegene.ophthy.med.umich.edu/unicode/

Regards,
Mike Lockhart
 
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Mike Lockhart        [Systems Engineering & Operations]
StayOnline, Inc
http://www.stayonline.net/
mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
GPG: 8714 6F73 3FC8 E0A4 0663  3AFF 9F5C 888D 0767 1550
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Jack J. Woehr
Sent: Monday, November 06, 2006 2:56 PM
To: OpenBSD-Misc Mailing List
Subject: i18n/l10n

Looked in the FAQ and don't find any path to start understanding
internationalization and localization in OpenBSD ... if there is
such a path?

-- 
Jack J. Woehr
Director of Development
Absolute Performance, Inc.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
303-443-7000 ext. 527

Reply via email to