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The word chinese style font
The word chinese style font





the word chinese style font

My newest round of "playing" with this shows me that "" is the only thing that works. Any ideas?Īfter previously playing around with "lang" quite a bit, I had the feeling that "" would end up being the answer. I also tried looking in the W3Schools references. I checked my workstation's font tool to look for family or generic names. The only way I can get a kai-like font is to use "ar pl ukai cn". I also tried "serif", "sans-serif", and "monospace" as well as "cursive".

the word chinese style font

I tried each of "regular script", "kaiti", "kaishu", "zhengshu", "zhengkai", and cursive, all also with spaces and dashes as well as one word. I also played around with the font-family itself. Is there any way of handling this other than using "span"? My hope was that for the whole web page, I could specify one font family for all English text on the page, and a separate font family for all the Chinese text on the page, and the browser's rendering engine would know from the (UTF-8?) character codes which font family to use without me telling it what text is Chinese and what text is English. My playing around shows that it does matter. My apologies that when I launched this thread, I did not realize that it would be relevant that the Chinese and English are mixed within a paragraph, and even within a single sentence. Notice that the English and Chinese are mixed within a single sentence as well as within a single paragraph. It shows an x-term in which I used the Linux "cat" command to display a file with mixed Chinese and English.

the word chinese style font

Take a look at the attached screen-capture. Having read your posting, I went to the W3Schools site and studied the "lang" feature, and dug in more to UTF-8, and related topics.







The word chinese style font