RE: surrogate at java's property file

2001-10-04 Thread Addison Phillips [wM]
Carl, Well I'm not too concerned about it. I know (heck, *you* know) the guys over there. They've done good work to date. I don't doubt they have a solution up their collective sleeves. In fact, the problem is basically that no matter which path they pick (UTF-16 or UTF-32), the Character and St

RE: normalize before map?

2001-10-04 Thread Yves Arrouye
[People were discussing whether one should do some case mappings before doing normalization, or the other way, and whether the case mapping can be naive or must account for what normalization will do/has done in order not to break assumptions that the resulting string is both case-folded and norma

RE: surrogate at java's property file

2001-10-04 Thread Carl W. Brown
Addison, It might be easier to convert the JVM from UCS-2 to UTF-32 so that you do not have to worry about surrogates. This would more closely match most Unix implementations (except Sun) where Java is widely used. Carl > -Original Message- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PRO

RE: Gujarati IME for win2k?

2001-10-04 Thread Peter_Constable
>Gujarati input support was added in all versions of Windows XP as a keyboard >(it wasn't necessary to use an IME).  Unfortunately, that support is not >available on Windows 2000, although there may be a third-party add-on out there. You can use Tavultesoft Keyman 5 (http://www.tavultesoft.co

RE: Unicode locale id

2001-10-04 Thread Carl W. Brown
Bent Herlevsen, > -Original Message- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On > Behalf Of Magda Danish (Unicode) > Sent: Thursday, October 04, 2001 10:00 AM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: FW: Unicode locale id > > > > > -Original Message- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED

Re: Unicode locale id

2001-10-04 Thread Michael \(michka\) Kaplan
The locale choice covers all of Unicode; the choice of 1033 just means that the standard collation table is going to be used, with no specific "exceptions" that many other languages require. More info on collation in SQL Server can be found in the following white paper (it discusses 7.0 as well):

FW: Unicode locale id

2001-10-04 Thread Magda Danish (Unicode)
-Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, October 04, 2001 7:40 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Unicode locale id Help Help Im going to install an MSSql-server ver. 7.0 and the unicode locale id has to have an config_value 1033, so

Re: Gujarati IME for win2k?

2001-10-04 Thread Michael \(michka\) Kaplan
Gujarati does not require an IME at all; it is not a script with that huge of repetoire! It does require a keyboard though have you looked into Windows XP for this? It provides not only a keyboard but also an OpenType font and collation data, as well. MichKa Michael Kaplan Trigeminal Softw

RE: Gujarati IME for win2k?

2001-10-04 Thread Cathy Wissink
Hi John, Gujarati input support was added in all versions of Windows XP as a keyboard (it wasn't necessary to use an IME). Unfortunately, that support is not available on Windows 2000, although there may be a third-party add-on out there. For the record, Indic languages can be input via a tra

Gujarati IME for win2k?

2001-10-04 Thread Holder, John
Does anyone know of an easy way of typing in Gujarati in Win2K in Unicode? (Say, in Word or other apps)... Thanks for any pointers or help, John --

RE: Unicode characters in applet.

2001-10-04 Thread Addison Phillips [wM]
Title: Unicode characters in applet. Actually, i18n.jar contains character encoding converters and other useful things... but nothing that will help you display Unicode characters: that's built-in even for the "crippled" JREs that do not include i18n.jar.   Your problem is probably font relea

Please delete me from this list.

2001-10-04 Thread Wade Riza
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Re: Code points for "al-Qaeda"

2001-10-04 Thread Lars Marius Garshol
* Mike Ayers | | People tend to harbor the belief that words can be moved between | languages unchanged. In truth, it is the exception, not the rule, | that this can be done. Lawrence of Arabia, when writing his "Seven Pillars of Wisdom", chose to transcribe Arabic names inconsistently into La