Theodore H. Smith wrote:
> My code I took from Uniconv.c fails on a roundtrip, converting 1114048
> from UTF32 to UTF8, then back again.
>
> I did modify the code however to make it faster. So can anyone here
> who uses Uniconv.c tell me if a roundtrip on 1114048 works fine?
I don't know what U
Hello Everybody
Is there any font making software that can create fonts that take up shape due to two
or more Unicode code points ?
In short i want a program that can create fonts with one keyboard character
representing two or more code points.
Can such characters be displayed as such by an OS
- Original Message -
From: "Michael (michka) Kaplan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Addison Phillips [wM]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Stefan Persson"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, June 09, 2002 5:47 PM
Subject: Re: Running Japanese programs under Win2K
> Ah, well lets be cle
From: "Stefan Persson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Is there any way to solve the problems with non-Unicode programs without
> having to change the default encoding for the entire OS? I.e. is there any
> way to tell the OS to use Latin-1 in program X and JIS in program Y?
No, there is not.
Well, you c
Ah, well lets be clear that we are talking about bugs in some other program,
then? :-)
In any case, I can change the user locale *and* the system locale and get
the desired behavior, and MUI is *still* not required
MichKa
Michael Kaplan
Trigeminal Software, Inc. -- http://www.trigeminal.c
>
> Small correction here: MUI is not required in order to change the default
> system locale to Japanese and keep the user interface as English
> on a Win2K
> enu machine.
Not in a Java program ::sigh::. Some parts of Swing and AWT use the user locale,
especially older JREs...
Addison
>
From: "Addison Phillips [wM]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To solve some of your square box problems I would suggest that you get
ahold of Microsoft's "Multilingual User Interface" package (MUI). I'm not
sure of the licensing details of MUI--> I get mine in my copy of MSDN. This
will allow you to set th
From: "Stefan Persson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> I have the English edition of Windows 2000 Professional, and I'd like to
run
> some Japanese programs. Some programs, e.g. Internet Explorer and MS Word,
> work properly, while other display square boxes, question marks and/or
text
> misinterpreted as
Hi Stefan,
Let's start with the easy one: Windows 2000 allows you to install any of the keyboards
that you might need without a download. The Internet Explorer download you got earlier
isn't necessary.
To install additional keyboards, open the "Regional Options" control panel and click
on the
Hi!
I have the English edition of Windows 2000 Professional, and I'd like to run
some Japanese programs. Some programs, e.g. Internet Explorer and MS Word,
work properly, while other display square boxes, question marks and/or text
misinterpreted as Windows-1252.
So: how shall I solve the above
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