Apache OpenOffice (AOO) Bugzilla – Full Text Issue Listing |
Summary: | Asian text, seeking simplest way to make it work | ||
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Product: | Internationalization | Reporter: | Unknown <non-migrated> |
Component: | www | Assignee: | Unknown <non-migrated> |
Status: | CLOSED NOT_AN_OOO_ISSUE | QA Contact: | issues@l10n <issues> |
Severity: | Trivial | ||
Priority: | P3 | CC: | issues |
Version: | current | ||
Target Milestone: | --- | ||
Hardware: | All | ||
OS: | Windows ME | ||
Issue Type: | DEFECT | Latest Confirmation in: | --- |
Developer Difficulty: | --- |
Description
Unknown
2002-10-18 08:12:20 UTC
OOo receives Chinese characters as Unicode. So, if you have Windows 2000 or later, you can input Chinese characters without problem. If you have Windows 95 or 98 (including ME), you'll need a text input program that can emit Unicode in a way Open Office understands. You'll have to make sure it emits Unicode, and preferably you should also disable any Chinese output processing (not select any GB, Big5, or auto mode). If the program has several ways to "output" characters, you'll need to try all the ways until you can input Chinese characters. (If you tried all ways and still cannot input, try a different program.) NJStar is known to work, but only after configuring it to emit Unicode and setting Chinese support to none. Change the component to l10n. acyl: Is this still an issue in latest stable version (1.1.1)? I think this is not a an OpenOffice.org problem. The OS is in charge of the input, via the selected IME. Installing support for chinese input under Windows seems to work. In Linux, configuring scim works perfectly, an even scim-tomoe provides an input pad for drawing a character which is then recognized an can be included in any OOo application. No activity from the submitter for almost 5 years... closing now. -> closed |