Dear all,
In the discussion about UTF-8S, there is one point that has not been
mentioned (or else I missed it).
Most people seem to be arguing from the point of view of users and
developers on platforms on which Unicode is well-established as the
default encoding. On Unix-like systems,
Hi,
I am pleased to announce that Tavultesoft have (finally!) released Keyman 5.0 and
Keyman Developer 5.0.
Keyman enables keyboard input of Unicode characters under Windows 95, 98, Me, NT and
2000 (although support for Unicode input under 95, 98 and Me is limited to a few major
applications
I guess I should be bounced at unicoRe. I hope the interested people
will monitor unicoDe.
Tex Texin wrote:
I am losing track of the discussion, so I decided to create my
own score sheet.
I welcome the initiative. However, I have a couple of minor points
I feel uncomfortable with.
So far
2001$BG/(B6$B7n(B14$BF|(B 9:43:17:GMT+00:00
Like that.
This Internet disservice...
$B$i$s$^(B $B!z$8$e$&$$$C$A$c$s!z(B
$B!!!_$"$+$M(B
$B!(B: Localization without translation? (was: Re: Business Case for i18n?)
Hello Andrea,
At 11:43 01/06/13 -0700, Andrea Vine
Tex,
I don't really intend to maintain this list however. If someone else
wants to, I am fine with their taking over it.
I'll give up my copyright to it... ;-)
I really don't think we need a list. I think the real issue is that the
people who proposed UTF-8s presumed that they could use
Title: First of many newbie questions
(here goes nothing)
Good day!
Pardon my newbieness (oooh boy am I a Newbie) but I have a few questions concerning Unicode. I've been following up on the discussions for the past week or so, so I'm starting to get a feel for Unicode. I still have tons of
This is nothing new. Look at the Spanish and Chinese signs in New York City.
By the way, we did go over where the Kinmonbashi is, right? (Not New York City, I
think.)
$B$i$s$^(B $B!z$8$e$&$$$C$A$c$s!z(B
$B!!!_$"$+$M(B
$B!
How can you put the set of bits meaning one character "in" the set of bits meaning
another character? One must come first!
This game I was playing had "handwriting order". To input the first kana of my name
"juuitchan", I had to type shi and then dakuten.
I don't have my book but with Unicode
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