Thanks, I'll try with the little help of my (chinese) friends :-) Hussein Shafie escribi?: > Alberto Gonz?lez T?llez wrote: > >> Is it posible to create simplified chinese documents with >> XXE?. >> > > I've never tried, but I would say yes. (We have Korean and Japanese > customers.) > > * You *may* have to change the default fonts used by XXE in order to be > able to see Chinese glyphs. See > http://www.xmlmind.com/xmleditor/_distrib/doc/help/com.xmlmind.guiutil.PreferencesEditorDialog.html#viewOptions > > * You'll probably want to turn on Edit option "Use integrated input > method support". See > http://www.xmlmind.com/xmleditor/_distrib/doc/help/com.xmlmind.guiutil.PreferencesEditorDialog.html#editOptions > > * CJK (Chinese, Japanese, and Korean) authors always turn on View option > "Wrap words wider than available space". See > http://www.xmlmind.com/xmleditor/_distrib/doc/help/com.xmlmind.guiutil.PreferencesEditorDialog.html#viewOptions > > > > > >> Do you know if FOP and XEP support printing format >> for simplified chinese documents? >> >> > > Yes, if you remap the 14 default PDF fonts to fonts having Chinese > glyphs. May be Arial, "Times New Roman", "Courier New" would do the trick. > > This is very easy to do from within XMLmind XML Editor. Simpy use > Options|Preferences, FOP section or XEP section for that. > > See attached screenshot. > > More info in this FAQ: > > http://www.xmlmind.com/xmleditor/faq.html#custom_pdf_fonts > --- > When I convert documents written in Russian (or Polish or Czech or any > non-western language) to PDF, almost all characters are replaced by the > "#" character. Is there a workaround for this problem? > --- > > > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ >
-- Alberto Gonzalez Tellez E.T.S. de Informatica Aplicada. C/ Camino de Vera s/n 46022 Valencia (Spain) Tel: 34-96-3877007 ext 75770 Fax: 34-96-3877579 e-mail: agt at disca.upv.es, web: www.disca.upv.es/agonzale

