Thomas Piekenbrock <thomas.piekenbrock@gmx.de> writes:
If you choose a font for Chinese in Mozilla, which is looking good for both Chinese and Roman letters, you should get what you are looking for. These is usually the case for full unicode fonts.
Bitstream's cyberbit.ttf can still be found on some ftp servers. Another theoretical option is the arialuni.ttf
Bitstream Cyberbit is quite ugly. MS Arial Unicode is a bit better, but still not as good as specialized Japanese or Chinese fonts. "Full Unicode" fonts are usually a compromise between Japanese and Chinese (and also a compromise for other languages). There is a overlap between Unicode code points for Chinese and Japanese, therefore it is usually not possible to make a "Full Unicode" font perfect for both Japanese *and* Chinese[1]. Most "Full Unicode" fonts I have seen are biased towards Japanese. E.g. both Bitstream Cyberbit and MS Arial Unicode have the Japanese glyph at U+76F4 (直). See also http://www.suse.de/~mfabian/test.html Footnotes: [1] it is possible with OpenType fonts which may contain several different glyphs at the same codepoint and a mechanism which selects the right glyph according to language context. -- Mike Fabian <mfabian@suse.de> http://www.suse.de/~mfabian 睡眠不足はいい仕事の敵だ。