On Fri, Jan 17, 2003 at 05:11:32PM -0600, Manoj Srivastava wrote: > Hi, > > Just because you are using a UTF-8 capable terminal does not > mean you can actually see a UTF encoded string. ሰው እንደቤቱ እንጅ እንደ > ጉረቤቱ አይተዳደርም።, though encoded in UTF, is hard for me to display. If > you are able to see this, would you please share what fontset you > are using? > > Now, გთხოვთ ახლავე გაიაროთ რეგისტრაცია <-- that I can see. > (Eĥoŝanĝo ĉiuĵaŭde ? Γειά σας? Здравствуйте!
Just FYI, I can see both Ethiopic and Georgian in mutt, on default uxterm (not-so-fresh unstable), when I select large font from menu (in default configuration). Using the default font,I see only Georgian, not Ethiopic. I would say it is decent (compared to situation, say, two years ago) > > I would love to have some of these neat files on my system -- > but first I need to find a more capable fontset. > It is not matter of supporting _all_ users with _all_ characters, but of supporting _as many as reasonably possible_. E.g., my needs for filenames are satisfied with characters from latin1, latin2, latin3, and cyrillic (yes, I really have such filenames, and really use the files, and would not like to transliterate all into ASCII). Current support of UTF-8 in woody quite satisfies me (after some tweaking, of course, since often the default settings are not UTF-8 friendly) -- ----------------------------------------------------------- | Radovan Garabík http://melkor.dnp.fmph.uniba.sk/~garabik/ | | __..--^^^--..__ garabik @ melkor.dnp.fmph.uniba.sk | ----------------------------------------------------------- Antivirus alert: file .signature infected by signature virus. Hi! I'm a signature virus! Copy me into your signature file to help me spread!