I find IE 5.5 displays it well. I use Netscape 4.7 which has
trouble with Hebrew among other things. If you use another
browser, I would be interested in reports on which ones work
well. (Don't bother to tell me which ones don't work.)
Indeed, this looks pretty cool. IE 6.0 also displays
Chris,
You don't have to remove your link. It would be nice if you remind
people that this is not a free download and is intended for customers of
Publisher (after all, it cost us a lot of our Office multilingual
development budget to license it and MonoType should also have the right
to
1) It seems to me that Persian transcription of Unicode (in the very first
running string of this site) is written wrong.
Thank you for pointing this out. Photoshop 5 does not support Unicode, so I had to
construct the image by other means and in this process there must something have gone
The font Arial Unicode MS is not free for download. You must be a
licensed user of an Office Family product from the 2000 or XP
generation. If you have Office2000 or OfficeXp, Arial Unicode MS comes
on the CD of the product. If you have Publisher2000, you can go to
Mike,
Long after upgrading to Win2K, setting up all my fonts, and testing
everything, I've come to a conclusion: there are darn few Unicode text
messages on the Unicode mail list (i.e. characters are referred to by
codepoint, but the character itself is never included).
While I
Open the form attached to this mail and be the first one to take advantage
of the new mechanism to propose Unicode characters.
ROFL, excellent :o] In particular step 5 should be made required instead optional.
Ciao, Mike
Hello Florian,
Yahoo Groups has ads by default (unless you pay a monthly fee for list
hosting), and some people do not trust the privacy policy of such
organizations.
Yes, I know. I'm subscribed to 9 YG mailing lists and manage another 4 on my own. It
is a piece of cake and there is a
Otto,
This page has been moved to:
http://www.geocities.com/i18nguy/UnicodeBenefits.html.
There is a small mistake in the table. Microsoft is mentioned twice in the "Widespread
industry support..." row.
Ciao, Mike
I see that the list software now appends [unicode] to all subject
lines. This is very annoying, and not very useful, since those who
wish to filter their mail and put posts from this list in a folder of
its own etc. etc. can now do so by using other headers, such as
"X-list: unicode" .
Hi Christopher,
To my mind the Unicode web ftp servers mean that a separate file area just
for this mailing list would be pretty well redundant - and I suspect most
people subscribed to this list have much better things to do than to
participate in chat rooms and polls (and I can't see
Yes, we have had it for a long time; no, nobody has solved it
entirely; and yes, this approach is wrong. Breaking a string into
words may require a thorough understanding of the vocabulary and
grammar of the language, and even that may not be enough.
But how can we then ever have a
that it might lead to wrong strings because formerly inner letters
can become final letters which can be of totally different form as we know.
Additionally, where are the usual three points to be drawn for right-to-left strings,
on the left of the string or still on the right?
Ciao, Mike
Dipl. Ing. Mike
Dipl. Ing. Mike Lischke
Senior software developer
--
Homepage: http://www.lischke-online.de
GraphicEx: http://www.lischke-online.de/Graphics.html
Virtual Treeview: http://www.lischke-online.de/VirtualTreeview.html
Unicode Edit and library: http://www.lischke-online.de/Unicode.html
to
answer. Windows cannot display UTF 32 characters, AFAIK Linux does not
either. So which common operating system can actually display UTF 32?
Mike Lischke
RD Senior software engineer
PS: It seems that the that reply address in this mailing list is set to the
original author instead the list
-Original Message-
From: R.C. Bakhuizen van den Brink [Rein] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Saturday, January 20, 2001 12:03 PM
To: Mike Lischke
Subject: Re: PDUTR #27: Unicode 3.1
On Sat, 20 Jan 2001, Mike Lischke wrote:
Mike Lischke
RD Senior software engineer
PS
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