Neil Booth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > Thing's are quite a bit simpler if you just use emacs-20's built-in
> > input methods
>
> Thanks for the reminder, but I had tried that (and forgotten about it)
> because I found it so frustrating. It doesn't accept "standard" input
> methods - to type in
Miles Bader wrote:-
>
> Thing's are quite a bit simpler if you just use emacs-20's built-in
> input methods -- they basically just work out of the box (as long as
> your emacs was compiled with the leim support enabled). Just do:
>
> (set-language-environment "Japanese")
>
> Then type C-\ (to
Neil Booth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> c) Setting up Japanese input is quite tricky. I use canna, with
> standard slink emacs20. The various packages for this come with
> Debian-jp.
Thing's are quite a bit simpler if you just use emacs-20's built-in
input methods -- they basically just work ou
Stephen Pitts wrote:-
> Hi! I'm trying to figure out what level of Japanese input support exists
> in Debian.
Not much to my knowledge, unless you install Debian-jp.
> Ideally, I'd like to be able to receive messages written in
> Unicode with mutt (via the mutt-ja package), and type messages/docu
Hi! I'm trying to figure out what level of Japanese input support exists
in Debian. Ideally, I'd like to be able to receive messages written in
Unicode with mutt (via the mutt-ja package), and type messages/documents
in kana/kanji with vim and have them stored as Unicode. Being able to print
Japane
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