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The Best of Windows 95.com 1996 December
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WIN95_DEC_1996_1.ISO
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nwa10e30.exe
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VIEW_ENG.HT_
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VIEW_ENG.bin
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1996-06-24
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<HTML><HEAD>
<META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1">
<META NAME="GENERATOR" CONTENT="Accent Multilingual Publisher /2.008b">
<TITLE>Viewing Multilingual Documents</TITLE>
</HEAD>
<BODY LANG=en.us BGCOLOR="#c0c0c0">
<P ALIGN=RIGHT><A HREF="Topics.htm"><FONT SIZE=2><I><U>Contents</A>/<A HREF="inde_eng.htm">Index
</A><A HREF="index.htm"></p></A></U></I></FONT><H2>Viewing Multilingual Documents
</H2><P><HR SIZE=4><P>Because different languages use different characters
and sometimes entirely different alphabets, they require different character
sets. Most browsers support only a few common character sets, such as Latin
1 and Latin 2. Most browsers also lack the ability to display more than one
character set at a time.<P>Navigate with an Accent supports more than 30 character
sets, and includes all the fonts you need to make them appear correctly. Thus,
Accent lets you view multilingual documents with Netscape Navigator
<FONT SIZE=1><SUP>(TM)</SUP></FONT> (under any language version of Windows).
<P>If you are viewing a document created with the Accent Multilingual Publisher
<FONT SIZE=1><SUP>(TM)</SUP></FONT>, Navigate with an Accent automatically
detects and uses the proper character set. With other documents, if the text
does not appear correctly, you can set the proper character set manually.
<H4>Changing the Character Set</H4><P>To change the character set:<OL>
<LI>From the list box on the right side of the <A HREF="tool_eng.htm">Toolbar
</A>, select the character set that most likely matches the page you are viewing.
For example, if you are visiting a Russian Web site and the text is illegible,
choose a Cyrillic character set from the list.<LI>If the text is still illegible,
try another character set for that alphabet.
</OL>
<H4><A NAME="unichar"></A>Documents Using More Than One Character Set</H4>
<P>A single Web page can display more than one character set, using a technology
called Unicode encoding. If you suspect that the page you are viewing contains
more than one character set (for instance, if the page includes both Arabic
and Greek), select one of the Unicode options from the list of character sets.
The Unicode options appear at the top of the list.<P>Of course, if the document
was created using the Accent Multilingual Publisher, Navigate with an Accent
will automatically use the correct character set.</BODY></HTML>