Hum, I am using a SID too, and i can manage to input japanese, although i am wondering whether it is possible to input some *anywhere*. I mean, can i input Japanese somewhere else that in my mlterm, such as in xchat or even mozilla? Because i feel tired to copy/paste everytime i have to write in Japanese. And moreover, whenever i input some, i have to have my text SJIS so that windows users can read it. Did i misconfigured my system? As a student in Japanese, i d really like to be able to input/show/print Japanese easily.
reguards, Pied. Linux 2.4.20 Kinput2 and canna and a big dirty mix of utf8/SJIS/ja_JP.eucJP in my locales and env :/ On Sunday 25 May 2003 14:00, Matthew Tippett wrote: > Install the language-env package. > > set-language-env is the program to run. > > In terms of inputing japanese, there kinput2 is the route to go. It > works great for for inputting japanese. > > I am using sid, so I don't know if it has what you need in woody. > > Regards, > > Matthew > > (Just starting to learn Japanese personally) > > Guldo K wrote: > > Hello :-) > > > > I'm using debian woody, localized in italian, and I'd like it to work in > > jap too. I mean, I can read japanese, but how can I write it too? > > (besides emacs, that I can already use for that) I tried and set up a > > multi-language environment following chapter 9 of the debian reference, > > but I can't get it to work. Do you have some advice about this? > > > > Thank you very much, > > > > Guldo > > Linux 2.4.20 > > Debian Woody 3.0 -- Les paroles sinceres sont rarement elegantes Les paroles elegantes sont rarement sinceres

