Hello John,
> We don't need a language to be known to or distributed by ICU. We can use
> the ICU library, for example, by feeding it custom collation rules and then
> asking it for sortkeys. We've done this in a previous project that was C++.
> For this one, we'll make some kind of ICU-Sharp wra
Atsushi,
> Hmm, what I cannot understand is that while you say that few of those
> languages you need are in ICU but you are still saying you will use
> ICU.
We don't need a language to be known to or distributed by ICU. We can use
the ICU library, for example, by feeding it custom collation r
Hmm, what I cannot understand is that while you say that few of those
languages you need are in ICU but you are still saying you will use
ICU.
Also note that CultureAndRegionInfoBuilder never helps custom
string collation. That framework is only for number and date
formatting.
Atsushi Eno
John H
Atsushi,
>Which culture do you need specifically ?
Our product is for minority languages, many of them "endangered", few of
which are in the ICU database. There some 6000 languages in the world, and
most of these languages need, for example, small sort-order tailorings.
The One Laptop Per Child
Hello,
Sadly we don't have sysglobl.dll which implements
CultureAndRegionInfoBuilder. It is a bit messy that it requires
additional consideration on how culture resources should be
retrieved and stored (I have to admit that I dislike it since
this framework works only on the machine that installe
In our application, which is solely for the world's minority languages, we
would like to be able to make new CultureInfo's from ldlm files (Locale Data
Markup Language).
On the Windows side, we can use the .Net Framework 2.0's
CultureAndRegionInfoBuilder class.
Any ideas on how we could do someth