RE: Font for Japanese US applications

2000-07-20 Thread Alan Wood
Pierre Vaures ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) asked: We need to display both English and Japanese (Kanji, Hiragana, Katakana) characters. We don t find a font able to display both, in particular on NT US. Microsoft supplies fonts that probably do what you want. MS Gothic is part of the Japanese

Re: Font for Japanese US applications

2000-07-20 Thread Michael \(michka\) Kaplan
MS Mincho is actually on the NT4 CD in the \langpack directory. michka - Original Message - From: "Alan Wood" [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: "Unicode List" [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: "'pierre vaures'" [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, July 20, 2000 7:22 AM Subj

Re: Font for Japanese US applications

2000-07-20 Thread John O'Conner
pierre vaures wrote: To Whom It May Concern: We develop, on NT4 using Visual C++ 6.0, an international application for Japanese and US users. We need to display both English and Japanese (Kanji, Hiragana, Katakana) characters. We don t find a font able to display both, in particular on

Re: Font for Japanese US applications

2000-07-20 Thread Michael \(michka\) Kaplan
Sent: Thursday, July 20, 2000 9:27 AM Subject: RE: Font for Japanese US applications Microsoft supplies fonts that probably do what you want. MS Gothic is part of the Japanese language pack that should be on your NT 4 CD-ROM. You can also install it via Windows Update on the Tools me

Re: Font for Japanese US applications

2000-07-20 Thread Michael \(michka\) Kaplan
- Original Message - From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] there's a character set identifier that is 0 for CP1252 and 128 for Asian fonts 128 is only good for Japanese... the actual definitions for charsets are in wingdi.h in the Platform SDK, but you can use for DEFAULT_CHARSET and not worry

Re: Font for Japanese US applications

2000-07-20 Thread Asmus Freytag
At 08:17 AM 7/20/00 -0800, John O'Conner wrote: 2. Compiling your app as a UNICODE application means that all Win32 API calls use Unicode-enabled versions of the API. Text areas expect you to pass Unicode, and it displays correctly when an appropriate font is used. Even if you don't compile an