teman"
From: Pushkar N Kulkarni/India/IBM
Date: 11/18/2021 01:41PM
Cc: i18n-dev@openjdk.java.net, core-libs-...@openjdk.java.net
Subject: Re: [EXTERNAL] Re: Supporting charset GB18030-2005
Hi Alan,
> We could start out by adding GB18030-2005, as you suggest.
Sure.
> A potential
Pushkar N Kulkarni,
Developer, IBM Runtimes
Simplicity is prerequisite for reliability - Edsger W. Dijkstra
-"Alan Bateman" wrote: -
To: "Pushkar N Kulkarni"
From: "Alan Bateman"
Date: 11/17/2021 05:20PM
Cc: i18
On 16/11/2021 19:02, Pushkar N Kulkarni wrote:
Hi Alan,
Thanks. I appreciate your response.
Yes, I think GB13080 must continue to be GB13080-2000 for now. I was initially hoping to
add a new character set with the name GB13080-2005. But I guess your suggestion of
internally mapping one of the
ar N Kulkarni" , i18n-dev@openjdk.java.net
From: "Alan Bateman"
Date: 11/16/2021 04:00PM
Cc: core-libs-...@openjdk.java.net
Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: Supporting charset GB18030-2005
On 15/11/2021 17:53, Pushkar N Kulkarni wrote:
> Hi there,
>
>
> OpenJDK currently supports version 2
On 15/11/2021 17:53, Pushkar N Kulkarni wrote:
Hi there,
OpenJDK currently supports version 2000 of the GB18030
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GB_18030) character set viz. GB18030-2000. The
character mappings corresponding to Unicode codepoints '\u1E3F' and '\uE7C7'
were swapped in a new ver
Hi there,
OpenJDK currently supports version 2000 of the GB18030
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GB_18030) character set viz. GB18030-2000. The
character mappings corresponding to Unicode codepoints '\u1E3F' and '\uE7C7'
were swapped in a new version of the character set named GB18030-2005. I