Windows xp global ime japanese
You also agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge the data collection and usage practices outlined in our Privacy Policy. What are you looking for? Preferences Community Newsletters Log Out. Download Now. Developer's Description By Microsoft. After you have installed the Global IME, just start your Office XP program, select Japanese from the language bar, and you can type Japanese, regardless of the language version of Office XP or the operating system you are using.
Full Specifications. What's new in version. Release December 5, Date Added May 31, Operating Systems. Additional Requirements None. Total Downloads , Downloads Last Week 0. Report Software. Related Software. Microsoft OneNote Free to try.
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Instant Quote Professional Free to try. An Install Supplemental Language Support dialog box appears informing you of the storage requirements for the language files. Another dialog box appears requesting a Windows XP installation disk or network share location where the language support files are located.
Microsoft Windows installs the necessary files and prompts for you to restart the computer. The Windows taskbar should now contain an input locale indicator circled in red. The existence of the indicator signifies that more than one input language has been installed on the system.
Type some characters in Notepad. These characters will help you visualize the IME window better later. Place the cursor in Notepad. Press HOME on the keyboard so that the cursor is at the beginning of the line. On the keyboard type "N", then "I". The following figure shows the appearance of the display. The small horizontal rectangle is the reading window, which displays the current reading string. Currently, the reading string is "ni" as a result of typing "N" and "I".
Type "3". Now Notepad has the following display. The reading window disappears because you have entered a complete pronunciation. A character is displayed on top of the Notepad cursor. This character is not part of Notepad, rather it is displayed in another window on top of Notepad and hides the existing characters in Notepad that are beneath.
This new window is called the composition window, and the string in it is called the composition string. The composition string is underlined in the display. Now type "H", "A", "O", "3" to enter another character. Note that the reading window shows up when "H" is typed and disappears when "3" is typed. As shown below, the composition string now contains two characters. Press the left arrow on the keyboard once. The composition cursor moves one character to the left, at the second character you typed.
A window appears on top of Notepad as shown below. This window is called the candidate window. It displays a list of characters or phrases that match the pronunciation that you have typed.
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