Mailing List ArchiveSupport open source code!
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]tlug: Japanese emails and jlatex under RedHat 6.1
- To: tlug@example.com
- Subject: tlug: Japanese emails and jlatex under RedHat 6.1
- From: Matt Gushee <mgushee@example.com>
- Date: Thu, 14 Oct 1999 21:16:53 -0400 (EDT)
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- In-Reply-To: <14341.25998.731426.261801@example.com>
- References: <14341.25998.731426.261801@example.com>
- Reply-To: tlug@example.com
- Sender: owner-tlug@example.com
Naoki Saito writes: > Also, I would like to use jlatex. If you want *internationalized*, rather than localized TeX, you might consider the CJK macro package. It provides Chinese/Japanese/Korean support on top of a standard TeX distribution. Thus, "all" you need are the TeX distribution, a Japanized ghostscript, and Japanese fonts. Another plus to CJK is that it's maintained by Werner Lemburg, one of the principal developers of Freetype, so there is good support for TrueType fonts. Ooh, I probably shouldn't mention that, Steve Jobs' spies might be listening. Okay: Depends on what you want to do with it, I guess: if you are serious about TeX and casual about Japanese, I'd go w/ CJK because it works with very recent TeX distributions such as teTeX 1.0 -- which is based on Web2C[1] 7.3, which has good support for some cool features that are lacking or problematic with earlier versions (I'll be happy to detail some of those features if you're interested). NTT-jtex is poorly documented, unsupported, and hopelessly out of date. But you were probably thinking of ASCII-jtex, or pTeX (don't really understand the difference, though there apparently is one). The documentation for that is better -- not much on the web, last I checked, but there are a few books about it -- only in Japanese, AFAIK, but perhaps that's your native language. It's also widely used and sort-of supported. But if I'm not mistaken it's based on a fairly old version of Web2C ... v. 6.1 or so? CJK can be found at any CTAN archive (check out http://www.tug.org/ for a *partial* listing of mirrors), and it's a modest-sized download. Matt Gushee Portland, Maine, USA mgushee@example.com [1] Web2c, for those who don't know, is the most widely-used TeX implementation for Unix-like platforms. Most distributions you're likely to find are based on Web2c. ------------------------------------------------------------------- Next Technical Meeting: October 9 (Sat), 13:30 place: Temple Univ. * Linux Internationalisation Initiative (Li18nux) speaker: Akio Kido * Japanese TrueType Fonts speaker: Adrian Havill Next Technical Meeting: November 13 (Sat), 13:30 place: Temple Univ. * Network Security speaker: Steve Baur Next Nomikai: December 17 (Fri), 19:00 Tengu TokyoEkiMae 03-3275-3691 ------------------------------------------------------------------- more info: http://www.tlug.gr.jp Sponsor: Global Online Japan
- References:
- tlug: Japanese emails and jlatex under RedHat 6.1
- From: Naoki Saito <saito@example.com>
Home | Main Index | Thread Index
- Prev by Date: Re: tlug: Japanese emails and jlatex under RedHat 6.1
- Next by Date: Re: tlug: Japanese emails and jlatex under RedHat 6.1
- Prev by thread: Omega (was Re: tlug: Japanese emails and jlatex under RedHat 6.1)
- Next by thread: tlug: wm advocacy [scwm is alive; sawmill is cool]
- Index(es):
Home Page Mailing List Linux and Japan TLUG Members Links