I heard after I install debian, it could display Chinese information normally without any further work, but I have trouble to see all the Chinese characters.
So I googled and installed Chinese fonts, use dpkg-reconfigure locales to add Chinese support, but none of them work.
I update system today. Just before , everything is normal. Once it finished , I found that my KDE can't display some characters. I am a Chinese user. The English words are normal,. Just some Chinese characters can't be displayed. When I refreshed the browser, they can be displayed again but some of them are font default and some of them are font Yahei. And they are displayed messed together. It is not pretty. AND it is not only in browser, anywhere displayed Chinese characters looks the same as browser. How to change them back to default font as one font not two types of font messed together?
I have used Chinese simplified language as default language, at that time I can use gedit to open some chinese file, also at panel of gedit, there were Chinese like open blah blah.
After I closed it and open it again, strange things happened, there were no Chinese words at panel , and could not display Chinese.....
Later, i have tried to logout session and login with Gnome session and set the default language as Chinese. This time, file names , program names can be showed in Chinese perfectly, somehow for gedit, nothing has changed, and English panel, no Chinese can be displayed.
I'm a Chinese user and installed ubuntu server. I choosed Chinese when installing and the console could display Chinese, but when finished installation and rebooted, the console couldn't display Chinese filename. Any body knows why and which terminal was used when installing?
I just installed CentOS 5.2. I have both fonts-japanese and fonts-chinese installed. But I cannot see characters displayed correctly. All Chinese and Japanese characters are displayed as blocks of hexadecimals, except Japanese kana. How can I make them displayed correctly?
*** Appendix 1: /etc/X11/xorg.conf *** # Xorg configuration created by system-config-display Section "ServerLayout" Identifier "single head configuration" Screen 0 "Screen0" 0 0 InputDevice "Keyboard0" "CoreKeyboard" InputDevice "Synaptics" "CorePointer" EndSection .....
Is there a way to get Document Viewer to display Chinese characters in a pdf? Adobe Viewer does but I would prefer to avoid proprietary software. I cannot get either Document Viewer or Okular to properly show Chinese characters in pdf documents downloaded from my college class homepage.
I have all the Chinese language support files, bells and whistles (both traditional and simplified) loaded and operational. When I create a Chinese document in OO Writer and save it as a pdf, both DocViewer and Okular display the the Chinese characters properly. I just cannot get either DocViewer or Okular to display Chinese in pdfs that are downloaded from the website of my course's online textbook/workbook.
Running 9.10 full boat version on an EEE 1000HD netbook.
Using Fluxbox, have tried this in XFCE and KDE. Chinese characters display properly in whatever browser I use online. I do need to see some in the file manager and this is not working.
I have installed the following chinese display files from Slack -
I've choice English as "primary language" in language configuration in Yast, and have also installed Chinese as secondary language.In most programs Chinese displays normally, like Evolution, Firefox, Dolphin, but in VLC media player and some other applications, Chinese couldn't be displayed properly.
On Linux Mint FBReader (both the latest version and the one in the 10.04 repositories)displays Chinese characters as boxes(see screenshot) for some reason, but on Windows it works fine. Is there any way to fix it?
This is to do with accessing Dos era CD rom under Linux.The characters in directory and file titles appear as "chinese".As I know that I've loaded and installed programs from these CD roms onto a Windows 2000 machine, I'm wondering why I can not read the file names now. They are definitely in English.I've research and found the mount -o "characterset" but I shouldn't need to do that as they are not foreign language CD roms.The only other thing I can think off is that they are both degraded, but I would not have expected that of commercial CD roms.
After installing Debian Squeeze, which packages should one install to enable a Chinese interface besides the usual English interface? Is this applicable to both Gnome and KDE ?
I can see and edit chinese file in console by vi testfile I also can gedit the testfile and print it in chinese perfectly. But I can't see the chinese by cli to print file , can only see some small rectangles to instead. lpr testfile
I want to know if it's possible to write chinese character in the different applications (openoffice, thunderbird ecc) and how to do it (keeping the original language of the OS, talian)
display Chinese using gnome terminal I can input Chinese using VI thru gnome terminal but I can not input Chinese(Big 5) correctly on the command line I use scim/bridge as my input method
Firefox and Epiphany use two different fonts for displaying Chinese characters, one kind of grainy, and the other more smooth, respectively.(I attached a screenshot) Is it possible to make Firefox use the Epiphany font?
Do anyone know how to install Chinese Language in linux?I have a Linux Mandriva 2009.1. My computer is reading Chinese Characters but the problem is when im running my Oracle E-Bussiness Suite the java program only displays "BOX".
I built and installed the latest 3.3.2 and also the Chinese language pack from SlackBuild. [URL]... whenever I open a file whose path has Chinese characters, the LibreOffice always tell me that the file does not exist. What's worse, I can not use SCIM in it, so I can not even enter a Chinese character. what goes wrong? LibOffice or my KDE(4.5.5)? And how to solve it?
We would like to type simplified Chinese characters on FC11. gcim is installed, and it is selected as input method. We see that with ctrl-space input method changes, and we can select types with ctrl-shift. However, we cannot find a "normal" simplified Chinese,. If we type "WO" it pops up with 7 possibilities, witch is not enough as it suppose to drop over 50 .
hope to get some lights here. I been using ibus input method forChinese characters from F11 to F12 and realised the character are not even. For example, get this maller than "ä½ ".
I've seen the trackpad tool to write chinese characters on macs, is there any such linux clone? Or are there any projects that anyone knows of which are trying to create that for linux?
I'm looking for a current primer on the options for Chinese input available for Karmic (9.10). I'm new to Linux, but have been using Chinese input method editors for Windows and Mac for some time. I found some info in these forums, but most of it is several years old.
Some specific questions:
1) I have enabled Chinese input through system>administration>language support, but it seems there is no option for traditional Chinese input via Pinyin, only through some of the other methods, like ¡.
2) I take is IBus is a general name for Asian language input in Linux, but I don't quite understand if it's the only option out there. Also, did it replace SCIM?
3) This being open source, I'm guessing there are tons of input method editors out there to try. Is there some sort of repository I can search.
Well, I was randomly taking a look at my vsftpd log today, and came across something unusual to myself. About a week ago a computer tried to connect to my computer repeatedly with bogus default usernames. There were many attempted connections with usernames such as 'user', 'root', 'linux', and 'login'. Probably about 1000 attempts, within about 2 seconds of each other.
Ive had my server up and running for a few weeks now, everything has been good. My one small hitch is that while in the console I need to be able to see Chinese Simplified characters. I dont really need to type them, but I do need to be able to read them. How do I go about adding support for simplified chinese?
I hope this is an appropriate place to post this - if not, so sorry & just let me know where I should start the chat: I run a dual booted (Win Vista & Ubuntu Studio Lucid) Dell Inspiron Laptop (2.2 ghz core2duo, 4 gb ram, 256 mb vc, 500 gb hdd).
At random times when I boot into Ubuntu, (right away after grub) I get a black screen with one line of dark red Chinese charachters at the top of the screen and then it just freezes there. Have any of you ever heard of this, and if so, could you enlighten this nOOb? All I do to fix it is reboot, and often this will fix the issue. Is it possible that my system been compromised through installing stuff from medi/univ/multi?
After installing wqy-zenhei chinese font, everything used it perfectly except Midori browser. It seems to be stuck on the ancient 'fixed' font set, which is abysmal for Chinese. It also takes ages to load a page with Chinese, pretends to freeze for a minute or two. I've played with Midori's appearance settings, selecting UTF-8, but to no avail.
I've also tried:adding the font to local .fonts directory adding font to /usr/share/fonts simply clicking on the ttf file and then 'install' (which puts it in the .fonts directory) But nothing seems to help. As I haven't yet made 15 posts, I can't post a URL, but I'm trying to add Chinese fonts from the uni-heidelberg.de site. (A search on free chinese fonts will give the URL). The only installation hiccup I've noticed is that the font name, when the ttf file is clicked on in the gnome GUI, is (for a number of fonts, not just one file). I don't think that's the problem though.