Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.newusers (
More info?)
What do I mean?
I mean that I can't help you.
I do not have that font, so I do not know if yours is damaged or not.
Do you have the Japanese language installed?
Do you have the Japanese keyboard layout or Input Method Editor (IME)
installed?
[[Regional and Language Options overview
You can also choose from a large number of input languages and text
services, such as different keyboard layouts, Input Method Editors, and
speech and handwriting recognition programs. When you switch to another
input language, some programs offer special features, such as font
characters or spelling checkers designed for different languages.
input language
The specification of the language you want to type in. Some programs that
are designed for Windows recognize this setting. When you add a new input
language, a keyboard layout for that language is also added.
text service
A program that enables a user to enter or edit text. Text services include
keyboard layouts, handwriting and speech recognition programs, and Input
Method Editors (IMEs). IMEs are used to enter East Asian language characters
with a keyboard.
Input Method Editor (IME)
Programs used to enter the thousands of different characters in written
Asian languages with a standard 101-key keyboard. An IME consists of both an
engine that converts keystrokes into phonetic and ideographic characters and
a dictionary of commonly used ideographic words. As the user enters
keystrokes, the IME engine attempts to identify which character or
characters the keystrokes should be converted into.
However, if you want to enter or display text in the East Asian languages
(Chinese, Japanese, or Korean) or the complex script and right-to-left
languages (Arabic, Armenian, Georgian, Hebrew, the Indic languages, Thai, or
Vietnamese), you can install the language files from the Windows CD-ROM or,
if applicable, a network.
Each language has a default keyboard layout, but many languages have
alternate versions. Even if you do most of your work in one language, you
might want to try other layouts. In English, for example, typing letters
with accents might be simpler with the U.S.-International layout. ]]
http://www.microsoft.com/resources/documentation/windows/xp/all/proddocs/en-us/lang_multilang_doc_overview.mspx
To install East Asian language files on your computer
http://www.microsoft.com/resources/documentation/windows/xp/all/proddocs/en-us/int_pr_install_languages.mspx
To add another keyboard layout or Input Method Editor (IME)
http://www.microsoft.com/resources/documentation/windows/xp/all/proddocs/en-us/input_kbd_add_kbd_layout.mspx
--
Hope this helps. Let us know.
Wes
MS-MVP Windows Shell/User
In news:2721B5E4-BB71-4DF7-9792-80258E69226A@microsoft.com,
CallistaZM <CallistaZM@discussions.microsoft.com> hunted and pecked:
> What do you mean? The font is called Hiragana Regular. The characters in
> question are Hiragana (Japanese) letters. Most of the Hiragana set is in
> the regular keyboard with some in Alt codes. Just a few are inaccessable
> to me, but without them, I don't have access to the whole set of Hiragana
> letters.
>
> "Wesley Vogel" wrote:
>
>> Do these characters have a name?
>>
>> A Font type?
>>
>> --
>> Hope this helps. Let us know.
>>
>> Wes
>> MS-MVP Windows Shell/User
>>
>> In news:922AA1A7-5B07-4AFA-9DC3-4C50C0F44312@microsoft.com,
>> CallistaZM <CallistaZM@discussions.microsoft.com> hunted and pecked:
>>> I have kind of an odd/tough question. I have a font with several
>>> characters that are encoded only in Unicode...I think. When I open up
>>> Character Map, I can see the characters there and it of course gives me
>>> the Unicode numbers for it. These characters have no corresponding
>>> keyboard key or Alt code. They appear to be solely Unicode. Normally, in
>>> such a case, in the Character Map I can hit Select and Copy and then
>>> paste the character in whatever text program I want. For some reason
>>> though, I can't with these characters. I don't know if the font is
>>> damaged or what. I've tried everything I can think of but it won't allow
>>> me to use them. Is there a way to straight type in a Unicode character
>>> given the Unicode coding numbers or is the Select and Copy the only way
>>> to access these? *confused and annoyed*