izus Posted September 8, 2008 Report Share Posted September 8, 2008 im hooking up the imac for a kitchen computer andi need some direction on installing chinese fonts Link to comment
timb Posted September 8, 2008 Report Share Posted September 8, 2008 If you are installing a current version, you don't need to do anything special. The fonts to display Chinese are built in. However if you want the menus and such in Chinese you need to take extra steps. Link to comment
izus Posted September 8, 2008 Author Report Share Posted September 8, 2008 If you are installing a current version, you don't need to do anything special. The fonts to display Chinese are built in. However if you want the menus and such in Chinese you need to take extra steps.i need to type them, to be able to switch back and forth from Chinese to Japanese to Romanization. Link to comment
izus Posted September 8, 2008 Author Report Share Posted September 8, 2008 If you are installing a current version, you don't need to do anything special. The fonts to display Chinese are built in. However if you want the menus and such in Chinese you need to take extra steps.what are the extra steps...?? Link to comment
jim_julian Posted September 8, 2008 Report Share Posted September 8, 2008 Bill, if you are still having a problem I will be home in an hour or so and have access to a Mac perhaps I can walk you through whatever is troubling you. PM me a number to call if you'd like to do this. Are you on OSX 10.5? Link to comment
timb Posted September 9, 2008 Report Share Posted September 9, 2008 Are you on 10.5? If so, then you just need to enable the character palettes you wish to use. Just go into System Preferences and select International. Under Language, select Edit list, and add the languages. In the inputs menu, select the input methods you want to use. You might also find this useful. Input methods that work more like windows. http://openvanilla.org/ good luck. Link to comment
izus Posted September 9, 2008 Author Report Share Posted September 9, 2008 i figured out part of the install...its pretty cool how its done. i still need a program to type my pinyin in Link to comment
jim_julian Posted September 9, 2008 Report Share Posted September 9, 2008 Bill ... no need for a program to type PinYin in ... just select it as a text entry option ... it's all automatic and works everywhere you enter text. Link to comment
Randy W Posted September 9, 2008 Report Share Posted September 9, 2008 Bill ... no need for a program to type PinYin in ... just select it as a text entry option ... it's all automatic and works everywhere you enter text. but I think he wants it to SHOW as pinyin, and not be converted to Chinese characters. Link to comment
jim_julian Posted September 9, 2008 Report Share Posted September 9, 2008 Bill ... no need for a program to type PinYin in ... just select it as a text entry option ... it's all automatic and works everywhere you enter text. but I think he wants it to SHOW as pinyin, and not be converted to Chinese characters. Ahhh ... Link to comment
izus Posted September 10, 2008 Author Report Share Posted September 10, 2008 Bill ... no need for a program to type PinYin in ... just select it as a text entry option ... it's all automatic and works everywhere you enter text. but I think he wants it to SHOW as pinyin, and not be converted to Chinese characters.yes exactly...i need 3 ways to typesimplifiedpinyinenglish not including katakana and hiragana for wo tai tai Link to comment
izus Posted September 10, 2008 Author Report Share Posted September 10, 2008 im really liking the MACone thing i dont like is the mousejust cant do as much with the one button....im going to end up learning alot more macros Link to comment
jim_julian Posted September 10, 2008 Report Share Posted September 10, 2008 Bill ... I assume you've gone to the System Preferences (under the Apple pull down) and selected the International control panel. Within that panel select Input Menu. Scroll down in the first window and select Simplified Chinese (or Traditional) and then select ITABC and one or both of the Wubi's. Most importantly check the box at the bottom of the control panel that states "Show input in menu bar". This will put a little flag menu in the menu bar that allows you to flip between English text entry and Chinese text entry, ºÃÔË Link to comment
timb Posted September 10, 2008 Report Share Posted September 10, 2008 (edited) Here is the trick to entering in Pinyin with the accent marks. Activate the "US Extended" keyboard in System Preferences and then do:Option-a and then <vowel> to create the first tones: ¨¡, ¨¥, ¨©, ¨, ¨±Option-e and then <vowel> to create the second tones: ¨¢, ¨¦, ¨ª, ¨®, ¨²Option-v and then <vowel> to create the third tone: ¨£, ¨§, ¨«, ¨¯, ¨³Option-` and then <vowel> to create the fourth tone: ¨¤, ¨¨, ¨¬, ¨°, ¨´u and then Shift-Option-u and then Shift-Option-<a, e, v or `> gives ¨µ, ¨¶, ¨· or ¨¸.v may be entered as a <vowel> to produce a ¨¹. For instance, Option-e v produces ¨¶. Option-u u produces a ¨¹ without tone marks. Edited September 10, 2008 by timb (see edit history) Link to comment
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