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- The japanese tools are somewhat ackward to use and difficult to setup
- for the time being. Here is some useful information.
- * japanese and locale
- OpenBSD does not have any true japanese locale support for the time being.
- Startup errors for kterm (`can't set locale for ja...') are quite normal.
- Manual pages for, e.g., jvim do install under /usr/local/man/ja_JP.EUC/,
- as they are written in Japanese.
- For the time being, you will have to fix your /etc/man.conf to see them,
- so that the _default setup reads:
- _default /usr/{share,X11R6,X386,X11,X11R4,contrib,gnu,local}/{man,man/old,man/ja_JP_EUC}/
- * is kterm working ?
- Once kterm is built, the distribution holds an uuencoded file (DEMO.kt.uu)
- that you should be able to cat after uudecoding.
- Note that the choice of fonts is reduced when you need to display japanese
- or corean characters.
- * jless vs. less
- Normally, jless should be highly compatible with less, to the point where
- it doesn't display japanese before you set JLESSCHARSET in your
- environment. iso8 is the sanest setting.
- * the jvim puzzle
- jvim depends on several pieces to work correctly:
- - kterm for the display, jvim uses ONLY EUC mode,
- - Wnn for the dictionary conversion,
- - onew for the interface between Wnn and jvim.
- as japanese includes thousands of characters, the only reasonable method
- for inputting these is to use a dictionary: you enter your text
- phonetically, then the automated dictionary makes a guess at the conversion,
- and you confirm the right choice. Wnn is the dictionary server.
- It needs to be started as root (this will probably be fixed in the future),
- it is called /usr/local/bin/Wnn4/jserver.
- To handle conversions, jvim adds another set of modes to the usual vim
- modes.
- ctrl-space, ctrl-@, or ctrl-\ is used to toggle from normal insert mode to
- japanese inserts. If Wnn does not work, you can still enter
- katakana/hiragana, but you will need Wnn to convert them to kanji.
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