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Re: [Editor OT] Finding the Unicode values of Japanese kanji?
From: |
Trevor Bača |
Subject: |
Re: [Editor OT] Finding the Unicode values of Japanese kanji? |
Date: |
Thu, 15 Mar 2007 13:55:41 -0500 |
On 3/15/07, Alard de Boer <address@hidden> wrote:
On 15/03/07, Trevor Bača <address@hidden> wrote:
> Question: does anyone know an online resource where I can type in, for
> example, each of the characters in 通常の位置, one by one, and get back
> Unicode sequences for each? Googling brings back some hopeful sites,
> but I can't quite get any of them to *start* with the Japanese
> character and reveal the Unicode; the sites all seem to want to do the
> reverse and start with the Unicode and then reveal the kanji.
I did some Googling and found a table containing a unicode
table containing kanji here:
http://www.rikai.com/library/kanjitables/kanji_codes.unicode.shtml
Finding the characters you posted worked fine in Firefox (simple
copy-and-paste into the Quick Find box). Not a very nice method
but it works.
Yes. Finding in the browser with ctrl-f does in fact seem to work.
It's a good fallback for sure.
The unicode for those 5 characters (4 kanji, 1 hiragana) seem
to be: 901a 5e38 306e 4f4d 7f6e
> (Alternatively, if there's a straightforward way to paste kanji
> directly into vim, I'd be grateful to find out what I'm missing.)
Sorry, don't know about vim. I use anthy in various applications
(using Linux).
Right.
I played around a bit with changing both
encoding=utf-16
fileencoding=utf-16
in my ~/.vimrc file. But I managed only to turn my .vimrc file into
kanji and make it completely unreadable!
I suspect there is some way to tell vim "hey, you're in 16-bit Unicode
now" and that that will probably let me paste Japanese directly into
inputfiles. Will require more looking, tho.
--
Trevor Bača
address@hidden