12-11-2002
Entering Japanese text on Solaris 8
Hi,
I have installed the Sun Solaris 8 with Japanese locale. it is able to display the Japanese characters and its environment.
However, I have no idea on how to input or enter Japanese characters into this environment.
Can someone please enligthen me?
Thank you very much and have a nice day.
9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I'm not sure which forum to post this on but ......
I'm currently using Putty as my Telnet tool which is great BUT Only when using European Character sets.
IMO the standard Japanes windows 2000 and Japanese Windows XP telnet is rubbish ....
Does anyone use a Telnet tool that will... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Ralf
3 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi. I am running Solaris 10,HPUX 11.31 and AIX 6.1. I am trying to get my system to write in Japanese. I can choose the Japanese language for the system to display, but I cannot figure out how to write in Japanese. I have set up my system, and Mozilla (including the menu and web pages) to display... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: meeraramanathan
1 Replies
3. AIX
Hi,
I have a PPD(Postscript printer description) file which is in Japanese.
I want to use the PPD file in AIX.
Is it possible
where should i set the Lang.
and is it possible to type in Japanese language.
Please help. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: meeraramanathan
3 Replies
4. Solaris
Hello All,
I have a solaris 10 sparc machine . I have installed all the locale .
hi_IN.UTF-8. and similarly for japanese. But when i am trying to insert Hindi test in a file using vi . Every thing is getting turned in dots .
Can any one help in this .I have configured the LANG and... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: Arif29march
14 Replies
5. Infrastructure Monitoring
I have googled for weeks now and all I am getting is the same results from frank4dd's notes on setting up perl script to produce alerts in Japanese. On the contrary I wish to ensure all my alerts come in English as primary language. What I am getting from Japanese-language-Windows-machine added... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: hedkandi
1 Replies
6. SuSE
I had just added Japanese language as my secondary language with yast and I am still not able to view Japanese characters (they appear mangled)
I've copied two text files from windows to the SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 (i586), one with UTF and the other with ANSI. When viewed with cat and... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: hedkandi
4 Replies
7. Solaris
Hi all,
I have just installed Solaris 10 on an old Fujitsu Primepower 650 which has been wiped clean. I haven't installed anything apart from the OS yet, so the machine is 99% idle.
I get long delays when logging in, first after entering the id then another long delay after entering a valid... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: longjon
8 Replies
8. Solaris
Pls help me to set the japanese locale in Solaris 10. I have checked JP locale has been already installed on Solaris BOX.
Thanks,
Karan N (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: nirka01
2 Replies
9. Solaris
Hi,
I am new to sloaris and just instlled the solaris 11.2, i know little more about linux, i open the /boot/grub/grub.cfg in solaris and there is many other entries forl solaris 11.2 one of them is for 'Oracle Solaris 11.2 text console' but at boot grub2 only show the first default entry that... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: shamsat
1 Replies
dxjim(1X) dxjim(1X)
NAME
dxjim - An input server for Japanese
DESCRIPTION
In a Motif environment such as CDE, Asian language input methods are supported by independent processes called input servers. The Japanese
input server (dxjim) is an X client process that can run on a standard X server, provided that the server system has the required Japanese
fonts installed. This means that the Japanese input server can run on any system that can access your X display device, including the
device itself.
Starting the Input Server
If your CDE session language is set to Japanese, the Japanese input server is started automatically, and both the language setting and the
Japanese input method is available for applications that you start during that session. If your session language is not set to Japanese,
you can switch to Japanese from a terminal emulation window by setting the LANG environment variable to a Japanese locale. From the same
terminal emulation window, you must also use the command line to start the Japanese input method server and then other applications in
which you want to use Japanese.
You can start the input server on your local workstation by using the following command:
% /usr/bin/X11/dxjim &
If you want to start the input server on a remote system, log on the remote system, and enter the following commands. Substitute the name
of your local system for <display_name> in the first command.
% setenv DISPLAY <display_name>:0 % /usr/bin/X11/dxjim &
After the input server is started, any Motif applications that have been internationalized to support Japanese can communicate with the
server to obtain input method services. However, remember that these applications must be started after the server is started.
RESTRICTIONS
This input server uses X11R6. It can connect to input-method clients running X11R4, X11R5, or X11R6 under the same locale. However, support
for multiple monitors (multi-head systems) is available only to clients also running X11R6. Support for multiple monitors is not available
to input-method clients using X11R5 or X11R4.
SEE ALSO
Commands: dxhangulim(1X), dxhanziim(1X), dxhanyuim(1X), locale(1)
Others: Japanese(5), i18n_intro(5), l10n_intro(5)
dxjim(1X)