Path: utzoo!mnetor!uunet!husc6!cmcl2!nrl-cmf!ames!ncar!gatech!bloom-beacon!mit-hermes.ai.mit.edu!guest From: guest@mit-hermes.ai.mit.edu.AI.MIT.EDU (G. U. Est Random) Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc Subject: Re: Looking for Korean Character Support Message-ID: <2957@mit-hermes.ai.mit.edu.AI.MIT.EDU> Date: 25 Mar 88 19:41:03 GMT References: <6138@dhw68k.cts.com> Reply-To: guest@hermes.ai.mit.edu.UUCP (G. U. Est Random) Organization: The MIT AI Lab, Cambridge, MA Lines: 26 Keywords: Korean Character Support MS-DOS Word Processing In article <6138@dhw68k.cts.com> mike@dhw68k.cts.com (Michael J. Cleary) writes: >I am looking for a program that will handle the Korean character set >on an MS-DOS environment. If there is something that addresses this, >I would love to hear about it. If not, I have heard of a generic language >word processor that lets you define your own character set. I would be >interested in any information. Michael: Are you interested in hangul or hanja? You can get hanja with the Duke Chinese Typist, which I discussed in a follow-up article in this section and a few others--but you'd probably want the ability to intersperse hangul, right? Well, the Duke Chinese Typist will eventually have a hangul interface (as well as katakana and hiragana interfaces for typing in Japanese). Refer to my other article. --Scott Horne shorne@amber.cs.clemson.edu BITNET: PHORNE@CLEMSON Scott Horne P.O. Box 9495 Univ. Stat. Clemson, SC 29632 803 656-8181