Neil,
I don't have an answer to your question. I am forwarding your email to
the Unicode mailing list
http://www.unicode.org/consortium/distlist.html. Hopefully someone on
the list will provide you with an explanation.
---
Magda Danish
Administrative Director
The Unicode Co
Try
a) ┐ etc.
b) Use an application to find those characters, copy them, and paste them into your HTML editor. For
this you need to use a Unicode charset for your HTML document, see
http://www.unicode.org/faq/unicode_web.html#9
Possible applications to use to find and copy the characters:
- Wi
Joel,
I am posting your question to the Unicode list
www.unicode.org/consortium/distlist.html and hope that one of the
subscribers will have an answer to your question.
Magda Danish
Administrative Director
The Unicode Consortium
650-693-3010
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-Original Message-
Date/Time
On Fri, 24 Oct 2003 01:58:03 -0700 (PDT), "Andrew C. West" wrote:
>
> Try BabelPad at uk.geocities.com/BabelStone1357/Software/BabelPad.html
>
> Select the text, and click on "Convert : NCR to Unicode" from the menu.
> Or simply check the "Convert NCRs" checkbox on the file open dialog when you
> > i'm looking for a tool or a tutorial to convert japanese
> > signs in numeric unicode signs (e.g. 留). Can you help me?
> >
Try BabelPad at uk.geocities.com/BabelStone1357/Software/BabelPad.html
Select the text, and click on "Convert : NCR to Unicode" from the menu.
Or simply check the "Con
If this is in C/C++ and your text is in Unicode, and you convert to a legacy (non-Unicode) codepage,
then you could use the ICU conversion API. It has an option to turn non-mappable characters into
numeric character references for HTML/XML.
Please see http://oss.software.ibm.com/icu/userguide/co
Mr. Nikolai,
I am forwarding yopur email to the unicode mailing list
http://www.unicode.org/consortium/distlist.html for a possible answer
from one of the list subscribers.
Regards,
Magda Danish
Administrative Director
The Unicode Consortium
650-693-3921
> -Original Message-
> Date/Ti
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