Re: cjk-lyx
Curtis Brune wrote: Hi, For my Chinese class I'm most interested in writing short documents and printing using big5 (traditional) -- cjk-lyx sounds perfect. cjk-lyx fails to run, however, saying "Sorry, This subroutine requires the scalable hangul fonts". I can't seem to find any debian packages that contain hangul fonts (which are korean I believe). Are there hangul font packages for debian unstable/testing? I searched and could not find them under stable or testing. Cheers, Curt
Re: cjk-lyx
Curtis Brune wrote: Hi, For my Chinese class I'm most interested in writing short documents and printing using big5 (traditional) -- cjk-lyx sounds perfect. cjk-lyx fails to run, however, saying "Sorry, This subroutine requires the scalable hangul fonts". I can't seem to find any debian packages that contain hangul fonts (which are korean I believe). Are there hangul font packages for debian unstable/testing? I searched and could not find them under stable or testing. Cheers, Curt
Re: cjk-lyx
Curtis Brune wrote: > > Hi, > > For my Chinese class I'm most interested in writing short > documents and printing using big5 (traditional) -- cjk-lyx sounds > perfect. > > cjk-lyx fails to run, however, saying "Sorry, This subroutine requires > the scalable hangul fonts". I can't seem to find any debian packages > that contain hangul fonts (which are korean I believe). > Are there hangul font packages for debian unstable/testing? I searched and could not find them under stable or testing. Cheers, Curt
cjk-lyx
Hi, I'm new to Chinese (taking 1st year Mandarin) in general. I am however an old hand at linux and debian. I'm currently using the testing distribution. I apt-get'ed a bunch of packages today, including cjk-lyx and a bunch of fonts. For my Chinese class I'm most interested in writing short documents and printing using big5 (traditional) -- cjk-lyx sounds perfect. cjk-lyx fails to run, however, saying "Sorry, This subroutine requires the scalable hangul fonts". I can't seem to find any debian packages that contain hangul fonts (which are korean I believe). I read the Chinese HOWTO, but I'm not sure what I need exactly. Also that HOWTO was written in 1998, things have changed no doubt since then. Do I need xcin or some other input filter? I did get cxterm working entering pinyin with tones -- totally cool! So I can edit .tex directly, but a WYSIWYG editor would be perferable. Also what about locale? Should it be set to something in particular? I saw the Debian Chinese FAQ, but it's in Chinese I can't read it yet. Any ideas? My environment is printed below. Cheers, Curt p.s. I'll save my "what about chinese input under emacs" questions for another time :) . hongkong:~$ export declare -x COLORTERM="gnome-terminal" declare -x COLUMNS="78" declare -x CVSROOT="/opt/CVSROOT" declare -x DISPLAY=":0" declare -x EMACS="t" declare -x HOSTNAME="hongkong" declare -x HOSTTYPE="i386" declare -x HZ="100" declare -x LANG="C" declare -x LC_CTYPE="en_US.iso-8859-1" declare -x LOGNAME="curt" declare -x MACHTYPE="i386-pc-linux-gnu" declare -x OLDPWD="/usr/doc/rxvt-ml" declare -x OSTYPE="linux-gnu" declare -x SHELL="/bin/bash" declare -x SHLVL="5" declare -x TERM="dumb" declare -x TERMCAP="" declare -x USER="curt"
cjk-lyx
Hi, I'm new to Chinese (taking 1st year Mandarin) in general. I am however an old hand at linux and debian. I'm currently using the testing distribution. I apt-get'ed a bunch of packages today, including cjk-lyx and a bunch of fonts. For my Chinese class I'm most interested in writing short documents and printing using big5 (traditional) -- cjk-lyx sounds perfect. cjk-lyx fails to run, however, saying "Sorry, This subroutine requires the scalable hangul fonts". I can't seem to find any debian packages that contain hangul fonts (which are korean I believe). I read the Chinese HOWTO, but I'm not sure what I need exactly. Also that HOWTO was written in 1998, things have changed no doubt since then. Do I need xcin or some other input filter? I did get cxterm working entering pinyin with tones -- totally cool! So I can edit .tex directly, but a WYSIWYG editor would be perferable. Also what about locale? Should it be set to something in particular? I saw the Debian Chinese FAQ, but it's in Chinese I can't read it yet. Any ideas? My environment is printed below. Cheers, Curt p.s. I'll save my "what about chinese input under emacs" questions for another time :) . hongkong:~$ export declare -x COLORTERM="gnome-terminal" declare -x COLUMNS="78" declare -x CVSROOT="/opt/CVSROOT" declare -x DISPLAY=":0" declare -x EMACS="t" declare -x HOSTNAME="hongkong" declare -x HOSTTYPE="i386" declare -x HZ="100" declare -x LANG="C" declare -x LC_CTYPE="en_US.iso-8859-1" declare -x LOGNAME="curt" declare -x MACHTYPE="i386-pc-linux-gnu" declare -x OLDPWD="/usr/doc/rxvt-ml" declare -x OSTYPE="linux-gnu" declare -x SHELL="/bin/bash" declare -x SHLVL="5" declare -x TERM="dumb" declare -x TERMCAP="" declare -x USER="curt"
cjk-lyx
Hi, I'm new to Chinese (taking 1st year Mandarin) in general. I am however an old hand at linux and debian. I'm currently using the testing distribution. I apt-get'ed a bunch of packages today, including cjk-lyx and a bunch of fonts. For my Chinese class I'm most interested in writing short documents and printing using big5 (traditional) -- cjk-lyx sounds perfect. cjk-lyx fails to run, however, saying "Sorry, This subroutine requires the scalable hangul fonts". I can't seem to find any debian packages that contain hangul fonts (which are korean I believe). I read the Chinese HOWTO, but I'm not sure what I need exactly. Also that HOWTO was written in 1998, things have changed no doubt since then. Do I need xcin or some other input filter? I did get cxterm working entering pinyin with tones -- totally cool! So I can edit .tex directly, but a WYSIWYG editor would be perferable. Also what about locale? Should it be set to something in particular? I saw the Debian Chinese FAQ, but it's in Chinese I can't read it yet. Any ideas? My environment is printed below. Cheers, Curt p.s. I'll save my "what about chinese input under emacs" questions for another time :) . hongkong:~$ export declare -x COLORTERM="gnome-terminal" declare -x COLUMNS="78" declare -x CVSROOT="/opt/CVSROOT" declare -x DISPLAY=":0" declare -x EMACS="t" declare -x HOSTNAME="hongkong" declare -x HOSTTYPE="i386" declare -x HZ="100" declare -x LANG="C" declare -x LC_CTYPE="en_US.iso-8859-1" declare -x LOGNAME="curt" declare -x MACHTYPE="i386-pc-linux-gnu" declare -x OLDPWD="/usr/doc/rxvt-ml" declare -x OSTYPE="linux-gnu" declare -x SHELL="/bin/bash" declare -x SHLVL="5" declare -x TERM="dumb" declare -x TERMCAP="" declare -x USER="curt"