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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: tlug: Redhat 6 and Japanese.
- To: tlug@example.com
- Subject: Re: tlug: Redhat 6 and Japanese.
- From: "Stephen J. Turnbull" <turnbull@example.com>
- Date: Fri, 10 Sep 1999 11:32:08 +0900 (JST)
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>>>>> "David" == David Walter <David.Walter@example.com> writes: David> Japanese, and/or what can I do to get Xemacs to come up David> successfully? Any help at this point would be greatly David> appreciated! Sigh. Avoid Red Hat would be a start. They are definitely on track to becoming the Microsoft of Linux, on the flash vs. robustness[1] axes if not in size. XEmacs RPMs typically fail on Red Hat because they are always changing their libc. GNU Emacs is tracked a little better, but suffers from the same Achilles heel (the executable is loaded with data and then "dumped", which means that the data structures are quickly loaded from disk byte for byte instead of computed slowly at runtime; if the structures change, and in glibc they do fairly often, SIGSEGV or SIGBUS is the least you should expect; then, of course, the Red Hat developers add glitches of their own). XEmacs should build pretty well automatically, either from RPM or from the FTP distribution. To build from FTP (ftp://ftp.xemacs.org/xemacs-21.1/ IIRC, current is 21.1.6 unless 21.1.7 was released last night) you will need the source distribution tarball, the SUMO Lisp package tarball, and the Mule Lisp add-ons. You should untar the source, read README.Packages, figure out where your lisp is going to be installed, put the packages there, and then build and install XEmacs. (Somewhat more complicated than you'd like it to be, but we working on that.) The alternative would be to hope that GNU Emacs works. You need the Mule version (probably that's the one supplied, but it might not be). Then there probably (I don't use GNU Emacs) is a Mule menu, enable multibyte buffers/characters there, and select your Japanese environment from the same menu. You'll be limited to Quail and maybe XIM (kinput2 + canna or wnn) for Japanese input (the latter is not officially supported by GNU AFAIK and you could run SIGSEGV because of bugs in Xlib, I dunno if the GNU guys have worked around those or not). Good luck. Footnotes: [1] I wish they would remember that, in the immortal words of Dennis Ritchie, "Unix is at bottom a big fast I/O multiplexor." BLTJ '73. -- University of Tsukuba Tennodai 1-1-1 Tsukuba 305-8573 JAPAN Institute of Policy and Planning Sciences Tel/fax: +81 (298) 53-5091 __________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ What are those two straight lines for? "Free software rules." ------------------------------------------------------------------- Next Nomikai: September 17 (Fri), 19:30 Tengu TokyoEkiMae 03-3275-3691 *** Linux 8th Birthday Anniversary! *** Next Technical Meeting: October 9 (Sat), 13:00 place: Temple Univ. *** Topics: 1) Linux i18n 2) Japanese TrueType fonts ------------------------------------------------------------------- more info: http://www.tlug.gr.jp Sponsor: Global Online Japan
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