Mike Lischke wrote:
You should have mentioned that only cimaChrt.htm should be
launched in the browser.
Sorry, I forgot to explain this!
The other HTML file is just a hidden frame containing javascript code.
(I explained this when I sent the first version, and my assumption was that
only
Hallo.
For those who found useful my previous chart, here is version 2.2.
New features:
- Converted to cascading style sheets;
- Minor optimizations to code;
- Added block descriptions (e.g. "Latin-1 Supplement");
- Added decimal numerical reference for HTML (e.g. "#241;");
- Added a GIF
Peter Constable wrote:
I did try to change the font using the instructions provided,
but it didn't seem to work for me (trying to display
characters in ver. 3.0 not supported by Arial Unicode MS)
using IE 5.5. Ideas?
No ideas, sorry.
Unluckily this kind of things is totally dependent on
Ar 7 Mar 2001, ag 1:51 scrobh Marco Cimarosti
fn bhar "RE: Javascript Chart":
Another funny example is with plane 1 characters (U-01 to U-01),
that are folded to plane 0 characters.
Doesn't happen for me. All plane 1-16 characters appear as 2 missing glyph
characters (
Hallo.
I wrote a small HTML document that implements a quick-and-dirty chart for
Unicode, and I thought that someone on the Unicode list could find it
useful.
The whole 17 planes may be reached, and you can see the three standard
encoding forms (not the schemes!) of each character.
The
On 03/06/2001 11:44:33 AM Marco Cimarosti wrote:
I wrote a small HTML document that implements a quick-and-dirty chart for
Unicode, and I thought that someone on the Unicode list could find it
useful.
Well, how's that for clever! Thanks. Not the fastest thing, but useful
nonetheless.
I did
At 10:37 AM 3/6/2001 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I did try to change the font using the instructions provided, but it didn't
seem to work for me (trying to display characters in ver. 3.0 not supported
by Arial Unicode MS) using IE 5.5. Ideas?
I didn't read the instructions :) but I did
On 03/06/2001 01:22:47 PM John Hudson wrote:
I didn't read the instructions :) but I did succeed in getting Marco's
chart to display with the Unicode 3.0 version of Monotype's Andale Mono by
changing the line
var fontName = "Arial Unicode MS";
to
var fontName = "Andale Mono WT J";
That was
In Windows ME, works in IE5.5 but not in Netscape 4.7 or Mozilla 2001021204.
So I doubt it would work in say Linux (I haven't tested it, but might be
able to later on).
In IE5.5/ME, it works for me not only with different fontName values, but
even with a list (e.g.,
var fontName="Arial Unicode
At 11:15 AM 3/6/2001 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
var fontName = "Andale Mono WT J";
That was exactly the same change I made. Can you display Yi or Ethiopic
characters?
Yes, no problem.
JH
Tiro Typeworks |
Vancouver, BC | All empty souls tend to extreme opinion.
www.tiro.com
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