2007-08-29, 15:41 | Link #1 |
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Seattle, WA
Age: 37
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Japanese in Photoshop CS3??
I never thought I'd have to ask a question about Photoshop myself but I happen to have one lol . . .
I have this font called "WP Japanese" and when I use it in Photoshop it does make Japanese Characters but I am not sure if it can use all the characters that are in the Japanese language. I am no pro when it comes to reading Japanese but forgive me if I am wrong, but aren't thier characters in Japanese that make up an entire phrase or word?? The WP Japanese font pretty much resembles the A-z and 1-0 characters in the english alphabet. So my question is: Is there any plugin/font that Photoshop can use to have all the Japanese font characters?? Becasue right now if I type the word Hello the WP Japanese font types out letter for letter . . . . . but aren't thier characters in the Japanese language that mean an entire word? Sorry if I am totally incorrect or wrong, I don't know much about the language so forgive me for my stupidity but I would like to make sure what I type in Photoshop is actualy correct. Thanks |
2007-08-29, 18:09 | Link #2 |
Love Yourself
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Northeast USA
Age: 38
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Switch your font to MS Gothic (perhaps Tahoma would work as well) and then type in Japanese through Windows' Global IME (you must have installed the East Asian languages and have Japanese "installed" at your keyboard settings). If you're using a Mac, use the International settings and enable the Kotoeri input method. In theory, when you switch language input modes, your font should switch over to a font supporting Japanese.
If you want to stylize Japanese, then you'll need to look for special Japanese fonts. The font you're asking about may be one.
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2007-08-29, 20:40 | Link #3 | |
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2007-08-29, 21:34 | Link #4 | |
gyabo!~
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Seems to me you're actually looking for a translator more than the ability to type in Japanese. I don't have any recommendations for any particular desktop translators though, since I haven't used one before. If you're just typing single words, some of the free online translators should be more than enough. But if you need to be able to do whole sentences you definitely need something more specialized. Also, this isn't something Photoshop specific, really.
Off-topic: Quote:
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2007-08-29, 22:04 | Link #5 | |
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Mainly I just want to make sure what type in Japanese actually says what it is supposed to. Like if I type a name in Japanese using the WP Japanese font I have to "assume" it is actually correct and if someone who could read Japanese saw it they'd know what name it was. I figure if I am going to use this awesome language I'd better get it right instead of typing a bunch of nonsense making a fool of myself lol. |
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2007-08-30, 00:24 | Link #6 |
Love Yourself
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Location: Northeast USA
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The way that the IME works is that you type in English characters (romaji) and it converts it for you as you go. I'm using a Mac system right now, but Kotoeri works the same way. It's not too difficult to pick up. Just note that when you hit spacebar, it'll convert what you typed to kanji (if applicable). Since there are multiple kanji with the same readings, hitting spacebar again will bring up a list from which you can select the kanji that you'd like. Similarly, the system is relatively good about knowing when to convert characters to katakana, but katakana is also selectable. You can even switch over to a katakana-only mode if you really desire to.
Note that IME also has an alpha-numberic entry mode, which is basically English only. So if you switch over to Japanese and you're still typing in regular English, make sure that the input is set to Hiragana (Windows XP shows this as a button with あ; Mac OS does as well)
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2007-08-30, 13:08 | Link #8 | ||
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ok thanks for the replies, I really appreciate it
I now have Japanese installed on my Vista machine and it woks great. I can toggle between Japanese and enlish mode anytime now. All I have to do is get used to using Global IME and stuff and I should be good to go. I found some help tutorials on it so I should be able to refrence those if I need to . . . . Quote:
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2007-08-30, 21:40 | Link #9 | |
I'll keep walking.
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2007-08-31, 02:13 | Link #10 | |
Love Yourself
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The kanji search isn't all that difficult, actually. The way I do it is through stroke count. If you are able to write kanji or Chinese characters, you can frequently deduce the stroke count of a character by practice writing it; the stroke number is likely within one or two strokes of what you thought it was. Doing this alone can give back a massive amount of characters to search through. To make it faster, I keep track of radical codes. Entering a radical code(s) along with the stroke number greatly decreases the number of hits, and makes finding characters much easier. If you do a kanji search, you'll notice that it gives the radical code for the radical of the character entry; I write the radical and its code down. If you don't know what radicals are, you've some studying to do Although unless you're actively reading/studying Japanese I'm not sure why you'd want to reference kanji.
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