On Sun, 18 Aug 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Can anybody tell me where to RTFM about controlling the way konsole handles
> Hebrew? I'd like it not to use the BiDi algorithm, or if possible, change it to
> act more normally (assume certain base direction).
Frankly, I don't like konsole. To fanc
Can anybody tell me where to RTFM about controlling the way konsole handles
Hebrew? I'd like it not to use the BiDi algorithm, or if possible, change it to
act more normally (assume certain base direction).
(I'm talking about Konsole in KDE 3, of course. Previous konsole was tame enough).
By the
I just wanted to bring the list up to date - in case anyone else has this
problem and needs help.
As I already wrote, Ilya and Tzafrir solved my Hebrew in Konsole problem. But I
still couldn't send Hebrew SMS because of encoding problems (utf8 - iso8859-8).
Nadav came to the rescue (off the list)
OK - thanks to Ilya and Tzafrir, I now see Hebrew in Konsole. And Nadav was
right about my Cellcom not being properly defined in the Cellcom database - I
spoke to Cellcom and it's now fixed. Now I can send a Hebrew SMS from Windows
(at work). When I send from Linux at home using Nadav's script, I
On 19-Jan-2002 Nadav Har'El wrote:
> On Sat, Jan 19, 2002, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote about "Re: Konsole
>> This is not true - the phone **does** support Hebrew. I looked at the Perl
>> code
>> in the script, but don't see the problem. BTW - I get the same error
>> message whether I use iconv as Ily
On Sat, Jan 19, 2002, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote about "Re: Konsole Hebrew - again
(more details)":
> Strangely enough, when I try sending the Hebrew SMS, I get an error message
> from Nadav's script:
>
> Send failed because phone 058522264 does not support Hebrew SMSs.
On 19-Jan-2002 Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> Here is the script from a debian woody system:
>
>#!/bin/bash --
>#
># Switch utf-8 mode
>#
>#-
>
> case $1 in
> on) echo $'\033%G'"UTF-8 on";;
> off) echo $'\033%@'"UTF-8 off";;
>
On 19-Jan-2002 Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> Here is the script from a debian woody system:
>
>#!/bin/bash --
>#
># Switch utf-8 mode
>#
>#-
>
> case $1 in
> on) echo $'\033%G'"UTF-8 on";;
> off) echo $'\033%@'"UTF-8 off";;
>
On Sat, 19 Jan 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On 18-Jan-2002 Ilya Konstantinov wrote:
>
> > Step 1. Switch the running Konsole to UTF-8 mode.
> >
> > On Debian, that can be done by running "konsole-utf8 on" from inside the
> > shell (that'll need to be done for every shell you run, so you might
On 18-Jan-2002 Ilya Konstantinov wrote:
> Step 1. Switch the running Konsole to UTF-8 mode.
>
> On Debian, that can be done by running "konsole-utf8 on" from inside the
> shell (that'll need to be done for every shell you run, so you might as
> well put it in your shell's startup file).
>
> Oth
On 18 Jan 2002, Ilya Konstantinov wrote:
> On Fri, 2002-01-18 at 14:28, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Typing Hebrew should be as usual (no question marks, but no BiDi either
> - Konsole is not a BiDi console).
[If that is what you want, try either 'biditext konsole' or try the xterm
with the i18n
On Fri, 2002-01-18 at 14:28, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I don't know what I'm missing, but Hebrew **seems** to be set up since I can
> see and type Hebrew in other KDE applications - for instance KMail and KWrite
> using iso8859-8 fonts. But, I can't see the Hebrew fonts in Konsole. The
> problem
I'm sorry to ask this again, but I'm about ready to give up, and want to give
it one last try :-). I've read all the Hebrew related files on IGLU, looked at
the KDE Hebrew pages, and exchanged ideas with a couple of people off the list,
and I still can't see Hebrew fonts in KDE Konsole.
In case
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