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#1
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WLM Ver 14 appears to have some troubles displaying KOREAN in the subject
line of the message list. With respect to Korean TEXT and subject lines in OPENED messages, I don't see any problems with Korean. It's curious that apparently no provision has been made for CHINESE spellchecking -- whereas Japanese and Korean ARE covered. -- DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor |
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#2
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WLM 14v
1. I don't see Japanese spellcheck available. 2. There are 2 versions of Chinese written language : --- Traditional Chinese. As the words imply, it is the written language handed down for 5000 years . It is used by Chinese in Taiwan, and overseas Chinese. It is also commonly used in Hong Kong by older generation. --- Simplified Chinese. Implemented by Communist Chinese government and now used in China. I don't believe MS has the ambition to tackle such a formidable task. ( They can't even sync the darn calendar !!!!! ) t-4-2 "D. Spencer Hines" wrote in message ... WLM Ver 14 appears to have some troubles displaying KOREAN in the subject line of the message list. With respect to Korean TEXT and subject lines in OPENED messages, I don't see any problems with Korean. It's curious that apparently no provision has been made for CHINESE spellchecking -- whereas Japanese and Korean ARE covered. -- DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor |
#3
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G True... The calendar is a SNAFU.
Yes, you're correct.... There is no Japanese spellchecking in WLM. I misstated that below. But Japanese IS correctly rendered in the subject line of unopened messages in the message list [unlike OE] -- as well as in opened messages. Of course the Korean language more readily lends itself to spellchecking, whereas Chinese and Japanese do not. I've installed the Korean spellchecker and East Asian language support -- but still get no Korean in the subject line of unopened messages. DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor "t-4-2" wrote in message ... WLM 14v 1. I don't see Japanese spellcheck available. 2. There are 2 versions of Chinese written language : --- Traditional Chinese. As the words imply, it is the written language handed down for 5000 years . It is used by Chinese in Taiwan, and overseas Chinese. It is also commonly used in Hong Kong by older generation. --- Simplified Chinese. Implemented by Communist Chinese government and now used in China. I don't believe MS has the ambition to tackle such a formidable task. ( They can't even sync the darn calendar !!!!! ) t-4-2 "D. Spencer Hines" wrote in message ... WLM Ver 14 appears to have some troubles displaying KOREAN in the subject line of the message list. With respect to Korean TEXT and subject lines in OPENED messages, I don't see any problems with Korean. It's curious that apparently no provision has been made for CHINESE spellchecking -- whereas Japanese and Korean ARE covered. -- DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor |
#4
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I've installed the Korean spellchecker and East Asian language support --
but still get no Korean in the subject line of unopened messages. Not sure if that works for you. It does for me in Chinese. Tools Options Send International Settings. Change Default encoding to Korean. UN-check " when replying....." Mail Sending Format set in HTML. Please see screenshot. t-4-2 "D. Spencer Hines" wrote in message ... G True... The calendar is a SNAFU. Yes, you're correct.... There is no Japanese spellchecking in WLM. I misstated that below. But Japanese IS correctly rendered in the subject line of unopened messages in the message list [unlike OE] -- as well as in opened messages. Of course the Korean language more readily lends itself to spellchecking, whereas Chinese and Japanese do not. I've installed the Korean spellchecker and East Asian language support -- but still get no Korean in the subject line of unopened messages. DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor "t-4-2" wrote in message ... WLM 14v 1. I don't see Japanese spellcheck available. 2. There are 2 versions of Chinese written language : --- Traditional Chinese. As the words imply, it is the written language handed down for 5000 years . It is used by Chinese in Taiwan, and overseas Chinese. It is also commonly used in Hong Kong by older generation. --- Simplified Chinese. Implemented by Communist Chinese government and now used in China. I don't believe MS has the ambition to tackle such a formidable task. ( They can't even sync the darn calendar !!!!! ) t-4-2 "D. Spencer Hines" wrote in message ... WLM Ver 14 appears to have some troubles displaying KOREAN in the subject line of the message list. With respect to Korean TEXT and subject lines in OPENED messages, I don't see any problems with Korean. It's curious that apparently no provision has been made for CHINESE spellchecking -- whereas Japanese and Korean ARE covered. -- DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor |
#5
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I forgot to mention :
Tools Options Read International settings. UN-check " Use default encoding for all incoming messages " t-4-2 "D. Spencer Hines" wrote in message ... G True... The calendar is a SNAFU. Yes, you're correct.... There is no Japanese spellchecking in WLM. I misstated that below. But Japanese IS correctly rendered in the subject line of unopened messages in the message list [unlike OE] -- as well as in opened messages. Of course the Korean language more readily lends itself to spellchecking, whereas Chinese and Japanese do not. I've installed the Korean spellchecker and East Asian language support -- but still get no Korean in the subject line of unopened messages. DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor "t-4-2" wrote in message ... WLM 14v 1. I don't see Japanese spellcheck available. 2. There are 2 versions of Chinese written language : --- Traditional Chinese. As the words imply, it is the written language handed down for 5000 years . It is used by Chinese in Taiwan, and overseas Chinese. It is also commonly used in Hong Kong by older generation. --- Simplified Chinese. Implemented by Communist Chinese government and now used in China. I don't believe MS has the ambition to tackle such a formidable task. ( They can't even sync the darn calendar !!!!! ) t-4-2 "D. Spencer Hines" wrote in message ... WLM Ver 14 appears to have some troubles displaying KOREAN in the subject line of the message list. With respect to Korean TEXT and subject lines in OPENED messages, I don't see any problems with Korean. It's curious that apparently no provision has been made for CHINESE spellchecking -- whereas Japanese and Korean ARE covered. -- DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor |
#6
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Yes, I've tried this, but I still get gibberish in the subject lines of
unopened Korean messages -- but not in Japanese messages. I normally use Western European (ISO) as my Default Coding Setting... And Mail Sending Format set in Plain Text. DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor "t-4-2" wrote in message ... I've installed the Korean spellchecker and East Asian language support -- but still get no Korean in the subject line of unopened messages. Not sure if that works for you. It does for me in Chinese. Tools Options Send International Settings. Change Default encoding to Korean. UN-check " when replying....." Mail Sending Format set in HTML. Please see screenshot. t-4-2 "D. Spencer Hines" wrote in message ... G True... The calendar is a SNAFU. Yes, you're correct.... There is no Japanese spellchecking in WLM. I misstated that below. But Japanese IS correctly rendered in the subject line of unopened messages in the message list [unlike OE] -- as well as in opened messages. Of course the Korean language more readily lends itself to spellchecking, whereas Chinese and Japanese do not. I've installed the Korean spellchecker and East Asian language support -- but still get no Korean in the subject line of unopened messages. DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor "t-4-2" wrote in message ... WLM 14v 1. I don't see Japanese spellcheck available. 2. There are 2 versions of Chinese written language : --- Traditional Chinese. As the words imply, it is the written language handed down for 5000 years . It is used by Chinese in Taiwan, and overseas Chinese. It is also commonly used in Hong Kong by older generation. --- Simplified Chinese. Implemented by Communist Chinese government and now used in China. I don't believe MS has the ambition to tackle such a formidable task. ( They can't even sync the darn calendar !!!!! ) t-4-2 "D. Spencer Hines" wrote in message ... WLM Ver 14 appears to have some troubles displaying KOREAN in the subject line of the message list. With respect to Korean TEXT and subject lines in OPENED messages, I don't see any problems with Korean. It's curious that apparently no provision has been made for CHINESE spellchecking -- whereas Japanese and Korean ARE covered. -- DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor |
#7
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Yes, I've tried this, but I still get gibberish in the subject lines of
unopened Korean messages -- but not in Japanese messages. Once I open the message the subject line resolves to Korean -- from the gibberish. I normally use Western European (ISO) as my Default Encoding Setting... And Mail Sending Format set in Plain Text. DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor "t-4-2" wrote in message ... I've installed the Korean spellchecker and East Asian language support -- but still get no Korean in the subject line of unopened messages. Not sure if that works for you. It does for me in Chinese. Tools Options Send International Settings. Change Default encoding to Korean. UN-check " when replying....." Mail Sending Format set in HTML. Please see screenshot. t-4-2 "D. Spencer Hines" wrote in message ... G True... The calendar is a SNAFU. Yes, you're correct.... There is no Japanese spellchecking in WLM. I misstated that below. But Japanese IS correctly rendered in the subject line of unopened messages in the message list [unlike OE] -- as well as in opened messages. Of course the Korean language more readily lends itself to spellchecking, whereas Chinese and Japanese do not. I've installed the Korean spellchecker and East Asian language support -- but still get no Korean in the subject line of unopened messages. DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor "t-4-2" wrote in message ... WLM 14v 1. I don't see Japanese spellcheck available. 2. There are 2 versions of Chinese written language : --- Traditional Chinese. As the words imply, it is the written language handed down for 5000 years . It is used by Chinese in Taiwan, and overseas Chinese. It is also commonly used in Hong Kong by older generation. --- Simplified Chinese. Implemented by Communist Chinese government and now used in China. I don't believe MS has the ambition to tackle such a formidable task. ( They can't even sync the darn calendar !!!!! ) t-4-2 "D. Spencer Hines" wrote in message ... WLM Ver 14 appears to have some troubles displaying KOREAN in the subject line of the message list. With respect to Korean TEXT and subject lines in OPENED messages, I don't see any problems with Korean. It's curious that apparently no provision has been made for CHINESE spellchecking -- whereas Japanese and Korean ARE covered. -- DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor |
#8
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I forgot to mention :
Tools Options Read International settings. UN-check " Use default encoding for all incoming messages " t-4-2 "D. Spencer Hines" wrote in message ... Yes, I've tried this, but I still get gibberish in the subject lines of unopened Korean messages -- but not in Japanese messages. Once I open the message the subject line resolves to Korean -- from the gibberish. I normally use Western European (ISO) as my Default Encoding Setting... And Mail Sending Format set in Plain Text. DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor "t-4-2" wrote in message ... I've installed the Korean spellchecker and East Asian language support -- but still get no Korean in the subject line of unopened messages. Not sure if that works for you. It does for me in Chinese. Tools Options Send International Settings. Change Default encoding to Korean. UN-check " when replying....." Mail Sending Format set in HTML. Please see screenshot. t-4-2 "D. Spencer Hines" wrote in message ... G True... The calendar is a SNAFU. Yes, you're correct.... There is no Japanese spellchecking in WLM. I misstated that below. But Japanese IS correctly rendered in the subject line of unopened messages in the message list [unlike OE] -- as well as in opened messages. Of course the Korean language more readily lends itself to spellchecking, whereas Chinese and Japanese do not. I've installed the Korean spellchecker and East Asian language support -- but still get no Korean in the subject line of unopened messages. DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor "t-4-2" wrote in message ... WLM 14v 1. I don't see Japanese spellcheck available. 2. There are 2 versions of Chinese written language : --- Traditional Chinese. As the words imply, it is the written language handed down for 5000 years . It is used by Chinese in Taiwan, and overseas Chinese. It is also commonly used in Hong Kong by older generation. --- Simplified Chinese. Implemented by Communist Chinese government and now used in China. I don't believe MS has the ambition to tackle such a formidable task. ( They can't even sync the darn calendar !!!!! ) t-4-2 "D. Spencer Hines" wrote in message ... WLM Ver 14 appears to have some troubles displaying KOREAN in the subject line of the message list. With respect to Korean TEXT and subject lines in OPENED messages, I don't see any problems with Korean. It's curious that apparently no provision has been made for CHINESE spellchecking -- whereas Japanese and Korean ARE covered. -- DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor |
#9
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t-4-2
Don't feed the Trolls especially this one -- Peter Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged. "t-4-2" wrote in message ... I forgot to mention : Tools Options Read International settings. UN-check " Use default encoding for all incoming messages " t-4-2 "D. Spencer Hines" wrote in message ... Yes, I've tried this, but I still get gibberish in the subject lines of unopened Korean messages -- but not in Japanese messages. Once I open the message the subject line resolves to Korean -- from the gibberish. I normally use Western European (ISO) as my Default Encoding Setting... And Mail Sending Format set in Plain Text. DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor "t-4-2" wrote in message ... I've installed the Korean spellchecker and East Asian language support -- but still get no Korean in the subject line of unopened messages. Not sure if that works for you. It does for me in Chinese. Tools Options Send International Settings. Change Default encoding to Korean. UN-check " when replying....." Mail Sending Format set in HTML. Please see screenshot. t-4-2 "D. Spencer Hines" wrote in message ... G True... The calendar is a SNAFU. Yes, you're correct.... There is no Japanese spellchecking in WLM. I misstated that below. But Japanese IS correctly rendered in the subject line of unopened messages in the message list [unlike OE] -- as well as in opened messages. Of course the Korean language more readily lends itself to spellchecking, whereas Chinese and Japanese do not. I've installed the Korean spellchecker and East Asian language support -- but still get no Korean in the subject line of unopened messages. DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor "t-4-2" wrote in message ... WLM 14v 1. I don't see Japanese spellcheck available. 2. There are 2 versions of Chinese written language : --- Traditional Chinese. As the words imply, it is the written language handed down for 5000 years . It is used by Chinese in Taiwan, and overseas Chinese. It is also commonly used in Hong Kong by older generation. --- Simplified Chinese. Implemented by Communist Chinese government and now used in China. I don't believe MS has the ambition to tackle such a formidable task. ( They can't even sync the darn calendar !!!!! ) t-4-2 "D. Spencer Hines" wrote in message ... WLM Ver 14 appears to have some troubles displaying KOREAN in the subject line of the message list. With respect to Korean TEXT and subject lines in OPENED messages, I don't see any problems with Korean. It's curious that apparently no provision has been made for CHINESE spellchecking -- whereas Japanese and Korean ARE covered. -- DSH Lux et Veritas et Libertas Vires et Honor |
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