Windows 98 Arabic Iso

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Dagmar Culloton

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Jul 2, 2024, 10:00:08 PM7/2/24
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I don't think there's a difference in keyboards. There are maybe differences in word usage (but even though Arabic is my L1, I don't know of any). Dialects are another story since they're almost completely different in each country. I personally use this since I don't know the arabic keyboard by heart: is quite simple and intuitive.Good luck.

Since windows-1252 does not encode Arabic letters at all, the only way to do the conversion would be to use some kind of transliteration. This is something completely different from encoding conversion (which does not change the identity of characters, only their coded representation).

Windows 98 Arabic Iso


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You could fake a conversion by converting to windows-1256 and then inserting the windows-1256 encoded data into the database as raw bytes. You would then need to keep track of the encoding of each value in the database, so that you know which bytes are windows-1252 and which are really windows-1256. This sounds like a mess, so consider whether it is possible to convert the data base to use UTF-8.

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My experience with Intel software in general is that it will use language as selected in regional settings. For example I know that graphics drivers do that. In my previous experience I had similar issue when evaluating Parallel studio compiler where the only way to switch display language is to change regional settings. -language-setting-to-see-english-on-a-japanese-os-environment-or-vice-versa-on-windows.html

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