The material on
this website was created using a unicode
compliant Devanagari font. Unicode is a 16-bit
encoding standard that allows all characters of
every major language in the world to be
represented. Unicode is platform independent,
meaning if you typed something in Windows, it
would appear the same way on a Macintosh
machine. Most modern systems have built-in
unicode support and often require nothing more
than a unicode compliant font for any particular
language.
If you can see
the following sentence, then your computer
should have no problems viewing this site:
हिन्दी भारत की राष्ट्रभाषा है | (Hindi bhaarat
kii raashtrabhaashaa hai .)
If you cannot
view the sentence above, try chaning the font
encoding to "UTF-8" in your browser. Most users
should find this option by going to View >
Encoding.
If you still
are not able to view the sentence above, please
try following the suggestions for your
particular operating system.
Windows
-
Windows NT / Windows 2000 / Windows XP
- Unicode support is built in and you should
have no problems.
- If you are
still not able to view the site, please
follow the following steps:
Enabling
support for Indian languages (Indic) on your
computer
Windows XP
Windows XP has inbuilt Indian languages
features. If you enable these features, you
will be able to view the Hindi pages much
better. You must have at least 10 MB of free
hard disk space and the Installation Disk of
Windows ready, before starting. Please close
any open programs.
1. Go to Control Panel (from the “Start”
button)
2. Go to Regional and Language Options
3. Click the “Languages” tab
4. Check (click) the line marked “Install
files for complex scripts and right to left
languages (including Thai)”
When you check this line, a new window will
appear, which will give a list of languages
that will be installed. This list will
include ‘Indic’. It will ‘warn’ you that you
need at least 10 MB of hard disk space.
Click OK to close this window. Then click OK
on the Regional and Languages Options
window. You will be asked to restart your
computer.
You should be able to view the Hindi text on
this site now.
Windows
2000
Enable support for Indian languages on
your computer. Windows 2000 has inbuilt
Indian languages features. If you enable
these features, you will be able to view the
Hindi pages much better.
1. Go to Settings (Start Button)
2. Go to Control Panel
3. Go to Regional Options
4. In "Language settings for the system" (in
the first "General" tab), select Indic.
5. Click Ok
You should be able to view the Hindi text on
this site now.
- You can
download the following font just incase,
download to your Windows/Fonts folder:
Raghu8
-
Windows 95 / Windows 98 / Windows Me
- Download and install the following font,
download to your Windows/Fonts folder:
Raghindi
- Win Me should work now, but for Win98/95,
you must also download the
Takhti editor, unzip it, run it and
close it. It should auto detect the correct
files needed to display the unicode font. If
not, please see the additional instructions
on the
Takhti site.
- Rebooting the computer is advised, but not
required. Refreshing the webpage in the
browser should be enough.
Top
Macintosh
-
Mac OS X (and above)
- Unicode support is built in and you should
have no problems. Advised to use Safari web
browser. Note, site was tested on OS X -
Panther, prior versions of OS X should also
work with appropriate unicode font.
-
Mac OS 9.x
- Using your OS 9.x installation cd, launch
the Language Pack installer and install the
Devanagari pack (see link in step 3 for
installation instructions).
- Reboot and the font should display.
-
Mac OS 8.6.x
- Same as OS 9.x except you'll be installing
"Multilingual Internet Access" rather than
Language Packs.
-
Mac OS 8.5.x
- Unfortunately there is no language support
provided by Apple, and seperate language
packs will have to be bought.
Other OSes
-
Linux
- Please visit the following site
for more information :
Devanagari for Linux
-
Unix, OS2, BeOS, others
- Unknown, we suggest you search
google.