When I attempt to type, a box appears and then spits out Chinese characters. The box wasn't captured during the Print Screen, but you can see the result from when I typed "te" for test. I am teaching at a university in China.
As part of my contract the school supplies a computer for personal use. Unfortunately, the Word program is in Chinese, which is useless to me. I need to change Word from Chinese to English. Yes, I did that and now there's nothing.
It's completly blank, no bopomofo or pinyin. You must use a font which also include Pinyin , i. But I tried several more times, and finally tried the format with 'reset default' values, then did it all one more time before it finally worked.
Very quirky, but it worked. So I tried again with a new document and new text, selected PRC Chinese, did the format step and it worked smoothly. Lesson to share with others: It may not work smoothly if you've already done the "Format", "Asian Layout", then "Phonetic guide" with a Language-Taiwan Chinese setting; but that doesn't mean it can't work; just start over.
So NNT is right: you need to select the text, then change its language to the correct one PRC if you want pinyin, or Taiwan if you want bopomofo , which does not affect whether the text is simplified or trad itional characters talk about bad design!!! I'm not sure that I am doing things correctly. I am running the newest version of Windows XP for Tablet edition pretty cool to write characters by hand on the screen for when I don't know a character and don't have a dictionary handy, but that's another story I have the Chinese language packs installed.
I also have the Chinese transcriber addition for SP2. I have a very small handful of Chinese fonts, so I feel that chinese is fairly well supported. It says that I am allowed to enter the information myself, but I don't think that was what I had intended. I tried changing language to whatever I had available. I tried changing the fonts back and forth from asian fonts to non-asian fonts, which weren't accepted, but I thought it might give it a bit more kick if it had to do it itself.
I tried and retried. I closed and re-opened Word. I use MS Office word Professional running on my own and my sister's computer here in my house. With SP2 sure, it got me my multi-language support, but more than doubled my boot time - great peice of work I have tried all combinations of fonts, languages and keyboards, including entering text using the pinyin, writing by hand on screen, writing in zhuyin I am getting pretty darned frustrated.
To be honest, I would actually like to start doing some more advanced writing practice in copying articles by hand the main reason I chose to buy a tablet, handwriting recognition is little short of awesome and I have the kind of penmanship that would be worthy of a blind three year old who had drunk a few too many kahlua mudslides.
If you don't have any ideas, anyone know who I could email at Microsoft to help me figure it out? Kentsuarez, you said that you finally tried the format with 'reset default' values and it worked.
We have encountered this problem repeatedly at my company, and rest assured - it is a bug. How do you type zhuyin? The following is an example of using Zhuyin input method to type a Zhuyin phonetic character.
Press the 1 key, followed by the lowercase letter l. Type a space, representing tone 1. Press 4 to select the corresponding character in the lookup choice area on the screen. How many letters are in the Chinese alphabet? What film is St Elmo's Fire song from? Note If the language that you want to type in is not listed, see the "How to install additional languages" section of this article.
If the language that you want to use is not listed or if the language that you want is listed but the keyboard is not listed under it, click Add in the Installed Services section.
In the Input Language list, select the language that you want to use. Click OK. The selected language and installed keyboard should be listed in the Installed Services section. If the language that you want to use is not listed in the Installed input locales section, click Add. In the Input Locale list, select the language that you want.
After you configure the keyboard, you can select the input language from the Language bar. For more information about the Language Bar, click Microsoft Word Help on the Help menu, type language bar in the Office Assistant or the Answer Wizard, and then click Search to view the topics returned. If the language that you want to type in is not listed in the "Step 2: Configure Windows to type in multiple languages" section, you can add languages by modifying the Regional Options.
The Regional Options are in Control Panel. To do this, follow these steps for your computer's operating system. In Microsoft Windows Server On the Languages tab, in the Supplemental language support area, click to select the Install files for East Asian languages check box. Restart your computer when prompted.
If you are not prompted, click Start, click Shut Down, and then click Restart. Click the Languages tab. Click to select the Install files for East Asian languages check box. If you are prompted to restart your computer click Yes. If you are not prompted to restart your computer, click Start, click Shut Down, and then click Restart. Click the General tab. In the Language settings for the system section, select the languages that you want to install, and then click Apply.
If you are prompted to restart your computer, click Yes. To check the spelling and grammar of text in a different language, install the appropriate language tools for the language you want to proof. To do this, use one of the following methods.
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