| Date: | Wednesday, September 29th, 1999 |
| Time: | 7.00pm-9.00pm |
| Location: | Xerox PARC (Parc Research Center Auditorium), Palo Alto. |
| see directions below |
| Agenda: | ||
|---|---|---|
| 7.00 to 7.05 | - | Announcements |
| 7.05 to 8.15 | - | Arabic, Hebrew, Hindi, and Thai support in Java2 |
| by Doug Felt and John Raley, IBM | ||
| 8.15 to 8.30 | - | Q&A |
| 8.30 to 8.45 | - | Product Demos if any.. |
| (All are welcome, no membership fee, no prior reservation necessary) |
| Note: For the "Announcements" section if you have something you would like announced, or any "News" (upcoming conferences, information about similar groups, applets...etc) please send mail to (Sudhakar Ramakrishnan) sudha@best.com prior to the meeting. A bulletin board would be placed for product announcements/job openings/miscellaneous announcements. |
by Doug Felt and John Raley
The Java2 platform provides the foundation for supporting a wide variety languages and customs. Text is represented with the Unicode character set, which covers most scripts in use today. Additionally, Java2 provides services for localized text processing, orientation of components in a user interface, and a rich set of capabilities for displaying and interacting with visually complex text.
This talk describes how the Java2 platform supports right-to-left scripts such as Arabic and Hebrew, Thai, and the Devanagari writing system, used to write Hindi.
Doug Felt is Project Lead for Complex Text in Java at the IBM Centre for Java Technology. As part of the Text and International team at Taligent and at the CJT, he contributed to the development of the bidirectional text support in JDK 1.2 and in Swing.
Doug worked on the original RichEdit control at Taligent, and ported the bidirectional text classes to JDK 1.1.
Doug is a graduate of Stanford University.
John Raley , Software Engineer, IBM Corporation John Raley is a Staff Software Engineer at the IBM Centre for Java Technology. As part of the Text and International team at Taligent and at the CJT, he contributed to the development of the bidirectional text support in JDK 1.2.
John worked on the original RichEdit control at Taligent, and was responsible for enabling the control for bidirectional text at the CJT.
John has a Master's degree in Computer Science from Virginia Tech.
Xerox Palo Alto Research Center
3333 Coyote Hill Rd
Palo Alto, CA 94304
(415) 812-4000
>From 280 south
>From 101