Install the language-env package. set-language-env is the program to run.In terms of inputing japanese, there kinput2 is the route to go. It works great for for inputting japanese.
I am using sid, so I don't know if it has what you need in woody. Regards, Matthew (Just starting to learn Japanese personally) Guldo K wrote:
Hello :-) I'm using debian woody, localized in italian, and I'd like it to work in jap too. I mean, I can read japanese, but how can I write it too? (besides emacs, that I can already use for that) I tried and set up a multi-language environment following chapter 9 of the debian reference, but I can't get it to work. Do you have some advice about this? Thank you very much, Guldo Linux 2.4.20 Debian Woody 3.0