Re: Hebrew in Linux Console

2004-06-23 Thread Tzafrir Cohen
On Tue, Jun 22, 2004 at 12:24:15PM -0400, William Sherwin wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > Actually my letter concerns another of your questions : about > > the function of alt-D etc in the xterm, but I cannot find your > > initial letter. > > I had this problem some time ago, and as X is buil

Re: Hebrew in Linux Console

2004-06-22 Thread Oron Peled
On Tuesday 22 June 2004 19:24, William Sherwin wrote: > Actually, I have no problems with CTRL-D (exit/logout); I have needed to use > CTRL-H instead of backspace in vim (but not in the command-line itself), > both running it in xterm and in the tty. One note. The CTRL-? is the actuall ASCII code

Re: Hebrew in Linux Console

2004-06-22 Thread William Sherwin
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Actually my letter concerns another of your questions : about > the function of alt-D etc in the xterm, but I cannot find your > initial letter. > I had this problem some time ago, and as X is built of so many > layers and I did not know where to look for the culprit, I >

Re: Hebrew in Linux Console

2004-06-21 Thread mavram
Hi, Actually my letter concerns another of your questions : about the function of alt-D etc in the xterm, but I cannot find your initial letter. I had this problem some time ago, and as X is built of so many layers and I did not know where to look for the culprit, I resorted to comparing all the c

Re: Hebrew in Linux Console

2004-06-21 Thread William Sherwin
Micha Feigin wrote: > At least in debian, the kbd package 1.12 contains setfont. On the iglu > page the command line seems to be > > setfont -m none -u none iso08.16 # or iso08.f16 > loadunimap /usr/lib/kbd/unimaps/8859-8.a0-ff.uni > > Although there were also some other options there for debian

Re: Hebrew in Linux Console

2004-06-21 Thread Micha Feigin
On Mon, Jun 21, 2004 at 01:15:48AM -0400, William Sherwin wrote: > Kfir Lavi wrote: > > In order to see hebrew fonts in xterm, you should run uxterm. > > This will set the local and then you will see your heberew chars when > > you write. > > OK, but what about in the Linux console itself, meaning

Re: Hebrew in Linux Console

2004-06-20 Thread William Sherwin
Kfir Lavi wrote: > In order to see hebrew fonts in xterm, you should run uxterm. > This will set the local and then you will see your heberew chars when > you write. OK, but what about in the Linux console itself, meaning in the tty? (One can switch to a tty from X by pressing CTRL+ALT+F1. Most

Re: Hebrew in Linux Console

2004-06-20 Thread Kfir Lavi
William Sherwin wrote: Shalom! While I was recently helped to get Hebrew fonts working in X (specifically, in OpenOffice 1.1.1), I have been unable to get them to work in the Linux console. For example, when I run vim -H, I get the proper cursor moving in the proper direction, but either no charac

Hebrew in Linux Console

2004-06-20 Thread William Sherwin
Shalom! While I was recently helped to get Hebrew fonts working in X (specifically, in OpenOffice 1.1.1), I have been unable to get them to work in the Linux console. For example, when I run vim -H, I get the proper cursor moving in the proper direction, but either no characters or blank characte