ghugh Song
Now, I issued "SuSEconfig" and I can see files in the directory. Guess what. gv shows the Korean character "??" correctly from the korean-Baekmuk-Gulim-KSC-EUC-H.ps file. But not from korean-Baekmuk-Gulim-UniKS-UTF8-H.ps
The latter showd just "Hangul" and nothing.
Works for me. What are the messages when you try to display the file with 'gs'. Better use 'gs' for testing, not 'gv' because 'gs' shows you some messages on standard output which may help to understand what's wrong. Do you see the correct messages, like that:
mfabian@gregory:~/test-texts$ LANG=C gs korean-Baekmuk-Gulim-UniKS-UTF8-H.ps ESP Ghostscript 7.05 (2002-06-28) Copyright (C) 2002 artofcode LLC, Benicia, CA. All rights reserved. This software comes with NO WARRANTY: see the file COPYING for details. Loading Baekmuk-Gulim-UniKS-UTF8-H font from /usr/share/ghostscript/Resource/Font/Baekmuk-Gulim-UniKS-UTF8-H... 17136180 14436291 1662616 337756 0 done.
showpage, press <return> to continue<<
This is what I got:
[...]
So, the message is exactly the same. But display windows does not show "??" unlike your case.
I see. The file korean-Baekmuk-Gulim-UniKS-UTF8-H.ps which was
attached to my mail is not UTF-8 encoded, it is EUC-KR (!)
encoded. This is my fault. It was caused because I did sent the
attachment as type text/plain (because binary attachments will be
stripped by the mailing list software because of bandwidth and
security reasons). And my mail user agent (Gnus under XEmacs) did
convert it to EUC-KR when sending the mail.
If you convert the file to UTF-8, the above print command works. You
can convert it to UTF-8 like this:
iconv -f EUC-KR -t UTF-8 < korean-Baekmuk-Gulim-UniKS-UTF8-H.ps > tmp.ps
mv tmp.ps korean-Baekmuk-Gulim-UniKS-UTF8-H.ps
Now the display with 'gs' should work.
--
Mike Fabian