Re: [gentoo-user] emacs and asian languages

2008-07-21 Thread David Sveningsson
David Relson skrev: On Mon, 21 Jul 2008 15:49:53 +0200 David Sveningsson wrote: ...[snip]... Try running emacs like this: LC_ALL="en_US.UTF-8" emacs -nw That works nicely! For reference: Depending on whenever you want to set this setting sitewide or not you can put LC_ALL="en_US.UTF-8" i

Re: [gentoo-user] emacs and asian languages

2008-07-21 Thread David Relson
On Mon, 21 Jul 2008 15:49:53 +0200 David Sveningsson wrote: ...[snip]... > Try running emacs like this: > LC_ALL="en_US.UTF-8" emacs -nw That works nicely! > If that doesn't help I have no idea why it doesn't work. I am able to > display Japanese, Chinese and Korean with xterm (with unicode >

Re: [gentoo-user] emacs and asian languages

2008-07-21 Thread David Sveningsson
David Relson skrev: I've got both emacs and xemacs installed. Using xemacs, most of the chinese, japanese, and korean characters show up as hex codes like \226. emacs does the better job (with japanese being correct). I've looked at the utf-8.xml page and what I've got is a combination of en_

Re: [gentoo-user] emacs and asian languages

2008-07-21 Thread Hong Hao
On Sun, Jul 20, 2008 at 08:09:24PM -0400, David Relson wrote: > Running "locale -a" reports: > > C > POSIX > en_US.utf8 > Hi, I'm not sure about your problem. emacs-cvs-23 support unicode it works like a charm on my laptop (both Chinese an Korean characters shows correctly here, I do

Re: [gentoo-user] emacs and asian languages

2008-07-20 Thread David Relson
On Mon, 21 Jul 2008 00:34:29 +0200 David Sveningsson wrote: > David Relson skrev: > > On Sun, 20 Jul 2008 22:29:15 +0200 > > David Sveningsson wrote: > >> This sounds like a font issue to me. Can you see the characters > >> correctly if you cat the files? > > > > Hi David, > > > > Using a Gnom

Re: [gentoo-user] emacs and asian languages

2008-07-20 Thread David Sveningsson
David Relson skrev: On Sun, 20 Jul 2008 22:29:15 +0200 David Sveningsson wrote: This sounds like a font issue to me. Can you see the characters correctly if you cat the files? Hi David, Using a Gnome terminal and the default character set "Current Local Ansi_X3.4-1968" all the asian characte

Re: [gentoo-user] emacs and asian languages

2008-07-20 Thread David Relson
On Sun, 20 Jul 2008 22:29:15 +0200 David Sveningsson wrote: > Citerar "David Relson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > > > I'm using emacs.22.1 and it's having trouble displaying asian > > languages, specifically chinese and korean. > > > > From the menus, using Options//Mule//ShowMultiLingualText, displays

Re: [gentoo-user] emacs and asian languages

2008-07-20 Thread David Relson
On Sun, 20 Jul 2008 22:29:15 +0200 David Sveningsson wrote: > Citerar "David Relson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > > > I'm using emacs.22.1 and it's having trouble displaying asian > > languages, specifically chinese and korean. > > > > From the menus, using Options//Mule//ShowMultiLingualText, displays

Re: [gentoo-user] emacs and asian languages

2008-07-20 Thread David Sveningsson
Citerar "David Relson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: I'm using emacs.22.1 and it's having trouble displaying asian languages, specifically chinese and korean. From the menus, using Options//Mule//ShowMultiLingualText, displays Japanese correctly but shows boxes for Chinese and Korean characters. Simila

[gentoo-user] emacs and asian languages

2008-07-20 Thread David Relson
I'm using emacs.22.1 and it's having trouble displaying asian languages, specifically chinese and korean. From the menus, using Options//Mule//ShowMultiLingualText, displays Japanese correctly but shows boxes for Chinese and Korean characters. Similarly, I've got a HelloWorld.java program that di