Hello Peter,

I've tried Internationalization links, and all languages work fine,
except Armenian. I get strange symbols and View Source shows all kinds
of html entities, like ° and ³

Thursday, August 15, 2002, 1:32:48 AM, you wrote:

PK> Yes Patrick-Julien, I can. Please visit the http://portalfreeportal.com/ and try 
all links. If you select "Internationalization (i18n)" you will be able to display an 
HTML page in different
PK> languages and with different font. I am sure your browser doesn't have a support 
for "Armenian" font, but you will be able to see it and even print it. If you select 
another link "Enterprise
PK> Information Portal" and click on the "News, Jobs" pane you will be able to see one 
portlet in German language and also print it. BTW, on the first page of the 
"Enterprise Information Portal" you
PK> will see few quite interesting portlets. For instance, "DataBaseBrowserTest" is 
capable to sort entries in real-time, try it.
PK> This site is an attempt to prove that you don't need to spend gazillions to have a 
quite sophisticated Web hosting solution.
PK> All questions are welcome. 
PK> Regards,
PK> Peter.

PK> "Patrick-Julien Germain" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>>Thanks Amanda for your request for clarification.
>>
>>Hi Peter can you confirm that you are able to embed portable fonts using XLT
>>combined with
>>CSS so that potentially any visitor can display these fonts regardless their
>>browser and/or platform?
>>
>>What I am looking for is a way to display my pages in my fonts that are
>>likely not installed on my visitors' system, and yet they can see my pages
>>in my fonts such as I designed them.
>>
>>Best regards to everybody.
>>
>>Patrick-Julien Germain
>>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>http://pjg.free.fr/
>>
>>http://www.oiseaubleu.org/
>>
>>http://thimote.free.fr/
>>
>>----- Original Message -----
>>
>>Subject: RE: [WEB] Any handy solution to embed fonts into HTML
>>pagesregardless of the visitors' browsers
>>From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Peter Kinev)
>>Date: Mon, 12 Aug 2002 17:36:10 -0400
>>X-Message-Number: 22
>>
>>Amanda,
>>Yes, that's what I meant. There are two possible ways to present your page.
>>One is to be sure that the client browser is smart enough to understand it -
>>HTML encoded pages. You obviously cannot expect that all browsers will be
>>able to decode it, so you need a stylesheet - CSS. But you can use more
>>powerful stylesheet - XSLT to transform XML pages into HTML. This
>>transformation could be done on the browser or OUTSIDE, on the server. The
>>first method is not always possible because as I said, some browsers will
>>not be able to guess it right. So, the industry now is using the second way,
>>processing XML pages with XSLT stylesheets on the server side and present an
>>HTML page to the browser with style non-depended of browser ability to
>>present it. I hope I will be able to demonstrate it tomorrow on our server.
>>Stay tuned!
>>Regards,
>>Peter.

-- 
Best regards,
 German                            mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 ICQ:48533867



____ � The WDVL Discussion List from WDVL.COM � ____
To Join wdvltalk, Send An Email To: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
       Send Your Posts To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To change subscription settings to the wdvltalk digest version:
    http://wdvl.internet.com/WDVL/Forum/#sub

________________  http://www.wdvl.com  _______________________

You are currently subscribed to wdvltalk as: [email protected]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to