On Wed, 5 Jun 2002 20:14:46 UTC, Alan Beagley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> opined:
> I see a keyboard icon in the bottom center of the upper part of the > screen. Clicking on that opens another small Mozilla window containing a > Hebrew "keyboard" and "radio buttons" to select the field into which the > characters are to be entered. Clicking the appropriate "keys" enters the > Hebrew characters into the field on the search form. > > Shalom. uVrakha. That is how I have been using the page; it's called a "Virtual Keyboard". It works, but it's very clumsy, and I'd rather be able to just type. > Stan Goodman wrote: > > With the help of Mike Kaply, I am seeing Hebrew pages displayed > > correctly in all cases (except that of my ISP, of course, which is > > apparently illegally designed, and which I can do without). What > > remains is filling in blanks on such a page, and this is so far beyond > > me. > > > > Such a page is "http://www.144.bezek.com/", which is a search engine > > for Israeli telephone numbers. The page displays correctly. Writing > > into any of the blank windows proceeds right-to-left as it should. But > > the characters written are the usual Latin glyphs. I am using a > > Unicode font for displaying Hebrew, of course. What, if anything, do I > > have to do in order to write in the same alphabet that the text is > > displayed in? > > -- Stan Goodman Qiryat Tiv'on Israel Please replace "SPAM-FOILER" with "sgoodman". The Terrorist Credo: You can make friends by exploding bombs in public places, and the more people you kill, the better they will like you. 200 years of European fecklessness in the face of Arab terror: Tripoli Pirates (1814); OPEC Oil (1973); Saddam Hussein and Yasser Arafat (1990 et seq.) -- but actually financing it is a 21st-century European wrinkle.
