This module is a simple utility to convert katakana, hiragana, and
romaji at ease. This module makes use of utf8 semantics. Strings in
this module must be utf8-flagged. If they are not, you can use Encode
to do so.
This is an Unicode conversion library with Japanese codesets support
for Ruby.
Supported character encoding schemes are UCS-4, UTF-16, UTF-8, EUC-JP,
CP932 (a variant of Shift_JIS for Japanese Windows).
This is a Perl5 module to handle Japanese character encodings, which
supports inter-convertion between sjis(CP932), euc-jp, jis, Unicode
(UTF-8, etc.) and "EMOJI" of Japanese mobile phones including DoCoMo
i-mode, ASTEL dot-i, Vodafone Vodafone-live!.
This is SJ3, a Japanese input method developed by Sony Corporation.
SJ3 is composed of Kana-Kanji conversion server(sj3serv), Kana-Kanji
conversion client for terminal(sj3) and Kana-Kanji conversion library(sj3lib).
This package includes jisyo(conversion dictionary) management tools for
the SKK(Simple Kana Kanji Convertor), a very fast and efficient Japanese
input method system.
Read ${PREFIX}/share/doc/skk/README.skktools for more detail.
SCIM table based Japanese input method: HIRAGANA, KATAKANA, Nippon
Smart Common Input Method platform, in short SCIM, is a development platform to
make Input Method developers live easier. It has very clear architecture and
very simple programming interface.
This is SJ3, a Japanese input method developed by Sony Corporation.
SJ3 is composed of Kana-Kanji conversion server(sj3serv), Kana-Kanji
conversion client for terminal(sj3) and Kana-Kanji conversion library(sj3lib).
SKK (Simple Kana Kanji Convertor) is a very fast and efficient Japanese
input method system, written in emacs-lisp. This package provides CDB
jisyo files (kana-kanji conversion dictionaries).
XTR is text processor to format text document.
Easy to start, but this is powerful to write document in Japanese.
XTR syntax is just a little bit different from
other text formatters like *roff.
Yet another Canna client
YC is a Japanese input method on Emacs/XEmacs. YC is written in
emacs lisp and can access to Canna server directly.
YC works well even if your Emacs does not support Canna.