Hello Kohda-sensei, others, > I'm not a Polyglossia user so not so sure but I know that
> TeXLive 2012/2013 already contains japanese.ldf like > /usr/local/texlive/2013/texmf-dist/tex/platex/japanese/japanese.ldf > on my Debian system. To be honest, I am not an expert on p(la)tex. I know it exists. I see it is in TeXLive so I will check it out! > I can't find so many appropriate sites but there are some site > on xeCJK written in japanese: > > http://zrbabbler.sp.land.to/xelatex.html > http://oku.edu.mie-u.ac.jp/~okumura/texwiki/?xeCJK Thanks, I will check those out. > In TeXLive 2012/2013, we already have LuTeX-ja so LuaLaTeX is > a good candidate but I don't think we need to forget XeLaTeX. > If you don't need vertical typesettings, I believe both > LuaLaTeX and XeLaTeX are good enough. > If you need vertical typesettings, I think only pTeX/upTeX > is useful practically at present. Interesting. My current question really emanates from the fact that I am considering to start writing my lecture notes in Japanese. For my classes (computer science, nuclear reactor physics, basic mathematics, nuclear reactor engineering) I have found it difficult to find appropriate text books. Many text books are available at the "bachelor" level, but for the "master" level there is not much - especially in reactor physics there are no "modern" text books available in Japanese, with one exception.... but that text book has 15 chapters, with more than 400 equations per chapter - that is a reference work, not a text book ;-)) Anyway - I will check uplatex + babel. That would solve all problems, I think. Cheers, Wilfred > > Best regards, 2013-6-5(Wed) > > -- > Debian Developer - much more I18N of Debian > Atsuhito Kohda <kohda AT debian.org> > Department of Math., Univ. of Tokushima > > > -------------------------------------------------- > Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: > http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex > -------------------------------------------------- Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex