Stephen,
Thank you for the good news!
I'm actually a user of traditional chinese characters and japanese
characters, if the ability of XEmacs 21.5 is not yet able to write on
these characters, I'm willing to help!
Also, in the 21.5 release, please include some instructions on how to
trigger / install these (XP local IME?) Input methods to type in the CJK
characters!
Regards,
Tsunhin
On Fri, 27 Jan 2006, Stephen J. Turnbull wrote:
Reply-To set to xemacs-beta and ben. The other lists are basically
dead.
>>>>> "Tsunhin" == Tsunhin John Wong <JohnW+(a)pitt.edu>
writes:
Tsunhin> Hi all XEmacs users on NT/XP, I'm trying to find a way to
Tsunhin> work on UNICODE text (inputing CJK characters)
XEmacs 21.5 is moving toward full Unicode support. The next step is
to use Unicode as the internal encoding. (Stalled as the lead
developer is on vacation, maybe we'll see results in February.) We
are currently restricted with respect to modern Chinese character sets
such as GBK and GB18030; these cannot be supported with the legacy
(Mule) internal encoding.
Tsunhin> by XEmacs in an XP box Is there anyway to install the
Tsunhin> MULE-UCS packages? and how is the status of MULE-UCS in
Tsunhin> recent year?
Mule-UCS has been orphaned, abandoned, unsupported, and unmaintained
for about 5 years. Nor does XEmacs 21.4 support Mule well at all;
third party patches are required. On the Windows platform you really
should use XEmacs 21.5, which does pretty much everything that
Mule-UCS does, although you may need to load some non-default
character sets. Up to the current release (21.5.24) it is very
stable, though there are many rough edges since it is the development
line. There is likely to be substantial instability in the near
future, however, as we replace the legacy internal encoding with
Unicode.
The emacs-unicode2 branch of GNU Emacs is well-recommended for
stability and character set support if those are overriding concerns.
But that branch is of course completely unsupported, currently not
being developed AFAIK (they're devoting maximum effort to the current
release) and is basically waiting on the release to be merged to
mainline, at which point you can probably expect some months of
instability. (And as far as I know all emacs-unicode developers are
Unix-based; I've seen no reports about it on Windows. It's *probably*
OK but I suggest asking before you invest effort.)
--
Graduate School of Systems and Information Engineering University of Tsukuba
http://turnbull.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp/ Tennodai 1-1-1 Tsukuba 305-8573 JAPAN
Economics of Information Communication and Computation Systems
Experimental Economics, Microeconomic Theory, Game Theory