Am 2000-07-13 um 13:28 h UCT hat Kevin Bracey geschrieben: > It is acceptable for a limited-capability device to display Japanese just > using katakana characters (under 64 8x16 glyphs). ... > Anything more advanced than that [...] will display the basic Kanji set and Hiragana, I suppose? I understand the the wording in TUS 3.0, sections 10.2 and 10.3 (pages 272 and 274) to the effect that Hiragana is required together with Kanji to write Japanese (and that Katakana is used in normal text only for foreign words or visual emphasis). So, I guess, a limited-capability device can support Katakana only, and an advanced one has to support Kanji + Hiragana + Katakana. Is that correct? Best wishes, Otto Stolz
- Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Kanji? Magda Danish (Unicode)
- Re: Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Ka... Antoine Leca
- Re: Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Ka... Otto Stolz
- Re: Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Ka... 11digitboy
- Re: Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Ka... Robert A. Rosenberg
- RE: Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Ka... Ayers, Mike
- Re: Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Ka... foster . feng
- Re: Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Ka... Kevin Bracey
- Re: Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Ka... Otto Stolz
- Re: Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Ka... Kevin Bracey
- Re: Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Ka... Antoine Leca
- Re: Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Ka... addison
- Re: Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Ka... foster . feng
- RE: Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Ka... Marco . Cimarosti
- Re: Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Ka... addison
- Re: Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Ka... John Cowan
- RE: Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Ka... Ayers, Mike
- Re: Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Ka... John Cowan
- RE: Subset of Unicode to represent Japanese Ka... addison

