Dear Tejaswini Niranjan,
My apologies for the delay in responding, was offline for much of the day.
Depending on whom you ask, you could get different replies about the script
Konkani uses. My understanding is as follows:
Devanagari-script Konkani = Official script in Goa. Prizes are mostly give
Dear all,
Correction: There is a mistake in the newsletter in the
Events Organized section. The Creative Commons event in Bangalore was
NOT organized by A2K team. It was organized by members of the Wikimedia
India Chapter and A2K team members, Nitika and Subhashish attended it
and helped with
On Mon, Mar 11, 2013 at 9:54 AM, Vishnu t wrote:
> As we understand, this would primarily include nurturing local talent that
> can help and support the Indian Language Wiki communities on orienting
> people towards Media Wiki, fix bugs, troubleshoot tech related issues, input
> methods, OCR etc.
On Mon, Mar 11, 2013 at 2:39 PM, sankarshan wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 11, 2013 at 2:37 PM, Pavanaja U B
> wrote:
>> But then there is one issue of missing characters in some scripts. For
>> example Tamil has very few characters. When we transliterate from other
>> language into Tamil, say Kannada, we
On Mon, Mar 11, 2013 at 2:37 PM, Pavanaja U B
wrote:
> But then there is one issue of missing characters in some scripts. For
> example Tamil has very few characters. When we transliterate from other
> language into Tamil, say Kannada, we will have to put one character instead
> of another. The or
But then there is one issue of missing characters in some scripts. For example
Tamil has very few characters. When we transliterate from other language into
Tamil, say Kannada, we will have to put one character instead of another. The
original character will be lost. When we transliterate back t
On Mon, Mar 11, 2013 at 10:38 AM, Pavanaja U B
wrote:
> This is not a very big task. All Indic scripts are separated by decimal 128
> in Unicode charts. For ex., take Hindi “ka”. Add 128 to its Unicode value to
> get Bengali “ka”. I had written a simple such transliterator long ago, using
> VB.NET
This is not a very big task. All Indic scripts are separated by decimal 128 in
Unicode charts. For ex., take Hindi “ka”. Add 128 to its Unicode value to get
Bengali “ka”. I had written a simple such transliterator long ago, using
VB.NET. I did not write any web interface to that.
Regards,
P