Apple Macintosh Korean Language Kit User Manual

Page 27

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I changed my Views control panel to the Seoul font, but I still see odd characters in my
Application menu.

Not all of the problems of working in multiple languages on one computer
have been solved. Unfortunately, the Application menu cannot display Korean
names, even after you set your Views control panel to the Seoul font. The
names of your Korean application programs will not be correctly displayed in
the Application menu and in certain dialog boxes.

The icons that appear in the Application menu next to each program’s name
may help you identify your Korean programs.

After setting the font in the Views control panel to Soeul, I can’t edit a Korean file or
folder name.

You may have a non-Korean keyboard selected in the Keyboards menu.
m Pull down the Keyboards menu and select the Power Input Method.

For more information on the Keyboards menu, see Chapter 4.

I can’t open a file in SimpleText Korean.

If you have more than one version of SimpleText on your computer—for
instance, SimpleText Korean and an English version—the wrong version may
start when you try to open a SimpleText Korean file.
m Start SimpleText Korean, then choose Open from the File menu to open

your SimpleText Korean file.

My Korean dates and times are not displayed correctly.

If you are used to working on a Korean Macintosh, you may expect to see
dates and times displayed according to the Korean format. But the Korean
Language Kit doesn’t change your whole system to Korean—your primary
system language is still the same, so your dates and times are displayed
according to the original format.

I re-installed one of my Korean application programs. Do I need to re-register it
in Korean?

If the name of your program changes, you must re-register it. See Chapter 3
for instructions on registering a program in Korean.

A 27

Troubleshooting

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