On Wed, Jul 10, 2013 at 05:15:51AM +, Murray Sargent wrote:
> A bulk approach works. The hyperlink gives full instructions on how to set up
> the fonts. You can customize it by changing the fonts listed in default.cfl.
Thanks.
—
A bulk approach works. The hyperlink gives full instructions on how to set up
the fonts. You can customize it by changing the fonts listed in default.cfl.
Murray
-Original Message-
From: unicode-bou...@unicode.org [mailto:unicode-bou...@unicode.org] On Behalf
Of Ilya Zakharevich
Sent: T
On Wed, Jul 10, 2013 at 04:24:36AM +, Murray Sargent wrote:
> Ilya asked, " Are there any other ways to show Unicode on Windows?"
>
> You can download Unibook (http://www.unicode.org/unibook/) and set up your
> fonts for the ranges. That's the way The Unicode Standard code charts are
> displ
Ilya asked, " Are there any other ways to show Unicode on Windows?"
You can download Unibook (http://www.unicode.org/unibook/) and set up your
fonts for the ranges. That's the way The Unicode Standard code charts are
displayed and printed.
Murray
I put some info on the subject into
http://search.cpan.org/~ilyaz/UI-KeyboardLayout/lib/UI/KeyboardLayout.pm#There_is_no_way_to_show_Unicode_contents_on_Windows
Are there any other ways to show Unicode on Windows? (Here I mean
showing “real” Unicode, not the subset of Unicode MicroSoft decided
On 7/8/2013 8:15 PM, Richard Wordingham wrote:
On Mon, 08 Jul 2013 14:42:15 -0700
Asmus Freytag wrote:
We are stuck with a format that seemingly assumes that all characters
are treated individually. However, I agree with you, that this is not
the case, but instead, there are these sets of punc
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