Re: [Corpora-List] Greek characters in Unix (summary)

From: Stamatia Spiliopoulou (spiliosi@hhs.bham.ac.uk)
Date: Tue Nov 26 2002 - 23:02:04 MET

  • Next message: Matthew Purver: "[Corpora-List] Summary: prosodically annotated dialogue corpora"

    I would like to thank the following people who provided me with information
    and suggestions about using Greek characters in a Unix environment:

    Dr. Michael Betsch (email: Michael.Betsch@uni-tuebingen.de )
    Aristides Vagelatos (email: vagelat@cti.gr )
    Patrice Bellot (email: patrice.bellot@lia.univ-avignon.fr)
    Dr. Edward Wornar (email: edie@serbski-institut.de)
    Mari Olsen (email: molsen@microsoft.com)
    Jonathan Robie (email: jonathan.robie@datadirect-technologies.com)
    Tito Orlandi (email: "directory posta elettronica"
    <email@rmcisadu.let.uniroma1.it>)

    What I found particularly relevant to my research was the following:

    1. A helpful site concerning Greek resources (Aristides Vagelatos)
        http://www.hri.org/fonts/

    2. Technical info for a system on X11 Display (Dr. Michael Betsch):

    >I assume that your system uses a so-called X11 Display (standard on UNIX).
    >In order to display something, this program needs suitable fonts (there
    >are fonts that contain Latin as well as Greek characters); these might not
    >yet have been installed. Check the output of the command:
                            xlsfonts | fgrep iso8859-7
    >this command will output the "font names" of the Latin-Greek fonts
    >available on your display. If you don't see any output from this command,
    >you need to have some fonts installed.
    >If there are fonts available, you probably need to tell your application
    >to use them for display. How this is done varies from one application to
    >another. Several applications share a common way to tell them:
    >use the parameter "-fn 'a font name as output by xfontsel'" on the command
    >line. You will probably have to put the font name in quotes.

    >Some applications read a file ".Xdefaults" in your home directory and get
    >their preferences from there. Which options you may set from there and how
    >you have to format them will be application specific; such preferences
    often look like:

    Xkwic*Font: -b&h-lucidatypewriter-medium-r-*-*-12-*-*-*-*-*-iso8859-2
    Xkwic*font: -b&h-lucidatypewriter-medium-r-*-*-12-*-*-*-*-*-iso8859-2
    Xkwic*stdfont: -b&h-lucidatypewriter-medium-r-*-*-14-*-*-*-*-*-*-2
    Xkwic*MatchFont: -b&h-lucidatypewriter-bold-r-*-*-14-*-*-*-*-*-*-2
    Xkwic*TargetFont: -b&h-lucidatypewriter-bold-r-*-*-14-*-*-*-*-*-*-2
    >(these set the fonts the corpus query interface Xkwic uses). Look into
    >your corpus software documentation.

    >NB: the Latin-Greek fonts replace the combinations of Latin letters with
    >diacritics by Greek letters, so you may only see either French accents or
    >Greek letters.
    >Sincerely, Michael Betsch

    Best regards,

    Stamatia-Irene Spiliopoulou

    *****************************************
    Stamatia-Irene Spiliopoulou
    MPhil (Research) in Corpus Linguistics
    University of Birmingham, UK
    Centre for Corpus Linguistics
    email: spiliosi@hhs.bham.ac.uk
    *****************************************



    This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Wed Nov 27 2002 - 01:16:59 MET