pcs0325

Joined: 21 Sep 2007
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Posted: Fri Feb 15, 2008 11:20 pm Post subject: |
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| Atavistic wrote: |
| pcs0325 wrote: |
| Atavistic wrote: |
I just tried all of those scenarios...and it's the exact same for me. And I get the won sign in the Google toolbar/browser bar when my keyboard is set to English!
That doesn't help, but at least you know it's not just your computer! |
What's your system locale set to? |
I dunno. But the keyboard is set to Korean, Korean. Before, I had to switch the keyboard more than once. Like it was switching from Eng to Kor setup, then from Kor-Eng with in that setup. Now it's flat Kor-Eng.
Otherwise...I have no idea how to locate the information you just asked for.
Edit: Just realized that link was not a sig line but a real link. My control panel is a bit different but the non-unicode setting is Korea. Is that what you mean? |
That is what I mean. I believe that determines how the backslash character displays in programs that respect your system locale setting. If a program doesn't respect that setting, then it can show up as either a backslash or a won symbol (depending on the program). Though, I wouldn't recommend setting your system locale to English (other than to test it out) because I've come across poorly programmed Korean programs that will just display garbage if your system locale is set to anything besides Korean. |
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