Got it.  Yes, that would be no problem at all.  Go for it.

On Sep 12, 2010, at 4:23 PM, Uriah Eisenstein wrote:

> OK, I should probably clarify: the program does not provide direct web access 
> to Unihan in any way, nor even contain it. It rather expects the user to have 
> downloaded Unihan.zip, and direct the program to the location of that file, 
> which it would then process. This shouldn't be more of a problem than having 
> a local copy of Unihan.zip, to the best of my understanding.
> (It might also be possible to direct it to read Unihan.zip directly from the 
> Unicode site, but I'd be sure to ask permission before trying that out).
> 
> Uriah
> 
> On Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 12:03 AM, John H. Jenkins <[email protected]> wrote:
> I'll raise the possibility with the appropriate individuals, but I think it 
> likely that the Consortium would prefer that third parties not host clones of 
> the Unihan database.  
> 
> On Sep 12, 2010, at 9:57 AM, Uriah Eisenstein wrote:
> 
>> Hello,
>> I'm nearing completion of a simple Java program which loads Unihan data from 
>> the source files into a DB, and provides SQL access to it.There's still at 
>> least a week or so of work on issues I consider essential, but once ready 
>> I'd be happy to make it available on the Internet if anyone's interested.
>> So far I've used it to search for possibly erroneous data in Unihan; my 
>> latest find is that 73 characters have a kTaiwanTelegraph value of 0000, 
>> which seems doubtful. It can also be useful for various statistical 
>> information such as how many characters are listed under each radical, or 
>> which blocks include IICore characters.
>> I'm also considering adding the contents of the Unicode Character Database 
>> as well at a later phase.
>> Regards,
>> Uriah Eisenstein
> 
> =====
> SiƓn ap-Rhisiart
> John H. Jenkins
> [email protected]
> 
> 
> 

=====
Hoani H. Tinikini
John H. Jenkins
[email protected]


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