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CJKV Information Processing
Chinese, Japanese, Korean & Vietnamese Computing
By Ken Lunde
First Edition
January 1999
Pages: 1128
ISBN 10: 1-56592-224-7 |
ISBN 13: 9781565922242




(Average of 2 Customer Reviews)


Book description
This definitive guide tackles difficult issues faced when dealing with complex Asian languages -- Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Vietnamese -- in the context of computing or Internet services. It contains revised information from Ken Lunde's first book, Understanding Japanese Information Processing, as well as coverage of three additional languages and how they impact Internet resources such as the Web, HTML, XML, Java, and Adobe Acrobat.
Full Description
CJKV Information Processing is the definitive guide for tackling the difficult issues faced when dealing with complex Asian languages -- Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Vietnamese -- in the context of computing or Internet services.
Unlike the English alphabet with a mere 26 letters, these complex writing systems use multiple alphabets comprising thousands of characters. Handling such an unwieldy amount of data is formidable and complex. Until now, working with these writing systems was an unattainable task to most, but this book clarifies the issues, even to those who don't understand East Asian languages.
This new book contains revised information from Ken Lunde's first book,
Understanding Japanese Information Processing, and supplements each chapter with meticulous details about how the Chinese (hanzi), Japanese (kana and kanji), Korean (hangul and hanja), and Vietnamese (Quoc ngu, chu Nom, and chu Han) writing systems have been implemented on contemporary computer systems. This book is unique in that it does not simply rattle off information that can be found in other sources, but rather it provides the reader with hitherto unexplained insights into how these complex writing systems have been adapted for use on computers, and provides the user and developer alike with useful and time-saving tips and techniques.
Information on today's hot topics, such as how these writing systems impact contemporary Internet resources like the Web, HTML, XML, Java, and Adobe Acrobat, is also provided.
This book is of incalculable value for the developer, programmer, user, and researcher -- anyone who comes into contact with these characters in the context of computers or the Internet needs this book. Topics covered in this book include:
- Writing systems
- Character set standards
- Encoding methods
- Input methods
- Font formats
- Typography
- Output methods
- Programming and code conversion techniques
- Dictionaries and dictionary software
This volume also contains a host of valuable appendixes, such as code conversion tables, character set tables, character set indexes, mapping tables, Perl code examples, a glossary, and a detailed bibliography.
Browse within this book
Cover
| Table of Contents
| Sample Chapters
| Colophon
Featured customer reviews

Astounding,
May 25 2006
Submitted by
Rick Jelliffe
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This book opened up the whole area for Westerners and is invaluable for anyone working in this field who needs a deep understanding. The book is well written, clear and accurate. No other book approaches it.
CJKV Information Processing Review,
April 10 2001
Submitted by
K Vainstein
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I haven't had a chance to do any CJKV-specific stuff, but can attest that this book explains L10N, I18N, and Unicode issues extremely well (much better than Oracle's NLS documentation, for example). Compiling/editing it must've been quite a labour... definitely an O'Reilly exclusive!
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Media reviews
"Astonishingly comprehensive." --Niall Murphy, Embedded System Programming, March 2001
"If you are heavily involved in developing or integrating software for these markets, then this book is an essential reference work, fully worth its price. Highly recommended" --David Stone, ACCU, Sep 1999
"Book of the Month...acknowledged worldwide as THE authoritative work on double-byte computing." --Japan Internet Report, November 1999
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