Help:Japanese character sets

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This help page will help you install Japanese character sets so that your computer will display them properly on the Internet in your web browser, as all modern operating systems and web browsers support Japanese fonts. Throughout the Kingdom Hearts Wiki, Japanese characters is are used in many different articles. Many computers with English or other Western operating systems do not show them by default, but most require a minimal amount of work to install or activate the capability.

Operating systems

Arch Linux

# pacman -S ttf-sazanami

Debian GNU/Linux and Ubuntu

Installing the ttf-takao-mincho package will add support for displaying Japanese text in the Debian GNU/Linux or Ubuntu distribution. You can do this with one of the following commands:

# apt-get install ttf-takao-mincho
# aptitude install -P ttf-takao-mincho

More fonts can be installed with this command:

# apt-get install ttf-takao

Fedora/Red Hat Enterprise Linux

As of Fedora Core 4, you need fonts-chinese, fonts-japanese and/or fonts-korean. For example,

yum install fonts-japanese

FreeBSD

With X.Org 7.x and above, install the package x11-fonts/font-jis-misc:

pkg_add -r font-jis-misc-1.0.0.tbz

Please note that the package version may be different. Alternatively, this can be easily accomplished by installing from the ports tree:

cd /usr/ports/x11-fonts/font-jis-misc
make install clean

Gentoo GNU/Linux

Install a Japanese font package, for example one of these:

# emerge media-fonts/sazanami
# emerge media-fonts/mikachan-font-otf

Mac OS X

By default, all necessary fonts and software are installed in Mac OS X 10.2 Jaguar (2002) and higher.

For Mac OS X 10.1 multilingual software updates are available as free downloads from Apple's website. The Asian Language Update will install support for Chinese, Japanese and Korean.

OS X Language Support Updates at apple.com

Mandriva Linux 2007

Install one or several Japanese font packages. The most common is fonts-ttf-japanese, but in addition you can also install fonts-ttf-japanese-extra, fonts-ttf-japanese-ipamona and fonts-ttf-japanese-mplus_ipagothic.

Make sure you have UTF-8 fonts enabled, as they may not be if you have upgraded from a former version of Mandrake/Mandriva.

OpenSUSE 11.4

By default, the Japanese fonts are installed during the DVD standard install.

If additional Japanese fonts or Japanese language input is needed, the installation of additional packages is required.

In order to install those packages, follow the step-by-step instructions below:

  1. Open the YaST Control Center.
  2. Select System on the left panel, and then select Language (Blue flag Icon) on the right panel. -A new separate window will open-
  3. On the Language window scroll down the "Secondary Languages" list and mark down "Japanese"
  4. Click the OK button on the down-right corner. -The installation of the necessary packages for Japanese language support will begin-

Once the installation is performed a reboot is required in order to use the new language settings. This method is also valid to install support for any other language.

Unicode Japanese fonts

Please go here: List of free Japanese fonts

Windows

95, 98, ME and NT

Your system should offer to download Asian fonts by default while viewing pages in those languages, just as long as you're using Internet Explorer. [1]

Otherwise, update your system manually with the language support packs.

XP and Server 2003

A Windows CD-ROM is needed while installing support for East Asian languages, even if it's not the one used during installation (Non-East Asian localizations only, as those from East Asia install Japanese support natively).

Alternatively, you can the Japanese language pack by itself from Microsoft. No disc is needed for this option.

Vista and Windows 7

Both Windows Vista and Windows 7 include native OS support for displaying Japanese text by default. To input Japanese on a non-Japanese version of the OS, however, the Japanese input method editor must be enabled from the Region and Language (Windows 7) or Regional and Language Options (Vista) section of the Control Panel.

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