Korean The text below has been language-tagged as Korean and is shown in the default font used by your browser. Japanese The text below has been language-tagged as Japanese and is shown in the default font used by your browser. The text below has been language-tagged as traditional Chinese and is shown in the default font used by your browser. Unless your browser locale is set to Taiwan, Hong Kong or Macau, this is usually the same font as is used for simplified Chinese characters.
#CHINESE FONTS WINDOWS 7 FULL#
This is because there is italics and imitation song in Windows 7 / Vista / 2008.If you see boxes, question marks, or meaningless letters mixing into the first part, you do not have full support for East Asian characters.Ĭhinese The text below has been language-tagged as Chinese and is shown in the default font used by your browser.
#CHINESE FONTS WINDOWS 7 CODE#
The code pages related to Simplified Chinese are as follows:ĩ36 gb2312 Simplified Chinese (GB2312) - actually GBKġ0008 x-mac-chinesesimp Simplified Chinese (Mac)Ģ0936 x-cp20936 Simplified Chinese (GB2312-80)ĥ0227 x-cp50227 Simplified Chinese (ISO-2022)ĥ4936 GB18030 Simplified Chinese (GB18030)Īfter using italic_GB2312 and imitation song_GB2312, it may no longer be displayed as the corresponding font in Windows 7 / Vista / 2008. Neither GB18030-2000 nor GB18030-2005 support the single-byte Euro symbol Now correct a common error on the Internet: If you want to know the content of Unicode, please visit. If you want to view the standard text of GB18030, please visit to read it. It should be noted that expanding Part B in GB18030 is not a mandatory standard. The number of Chinese characters in GB18030-2005 is roughly the same as the number of Chinese characters in Unicode 4.1, mainly with the extension of extension B ĭue to the release of Unicode 5.2, it is estimated that the new version of GB18030 will be released in the near future, and the extended part C will be added. The number of Chinese characters in GB18030-2000 is roughly the same as the number of Chinese characters in Unicode 3.0, mainly adding the extension A The number of Chinese characters in GBK 1.0 is roughly the same as the number of Chinese characters in Unicode 1.1 GB2312-80 is the earliest version, with fewer characters GB2312-80 has the smallest number of characters, and GB18030-2005 has the largest number of characters. The following is a brief introduction to the character set:
SimSun-ExtB only supports GB18030-2005 character set extension part B. In Windows Vista and later, Song / New Song, Hei, Kai, Qi Song, Microsoft Yahei support GB18030-2000 character set, (Note: Windows 3.X can only support the GB2312-80 character set) Italic_GB2312, imitation Song_GB2312 support GB2312-80 character set. In Windows before Vista, Times New Roman, New Times New Roman, and bold Chinese support GBK 1.0 character set, So what kind of Chinese characters can each font display? Windows Vista / 7/2008 Times New Roman, New Times New Roman, Heiface, Kai Kai, Songlike, Microsoft Yahei, SimSun-ExtB Windows XP / 2000/2003 / ME / NT Arial / Neo Arial, Bold, Kai type_GB2312, imitation Song_GB2312 (Windows XP SP3 Arial-PUA) Windows 95/98 / 98SE Song type, bold type, italic type_GB2312, imitation Song_GB2312
#CHINESE FONTS WINDOWS 7 SOFTWARE#
Some of the things that come out of installing Office:īy default, that is, without installing new fonts or word processing software such as Office, Windows provides the following fonts by default: Song style: English name of Chinese font (font-family) in SimSuncssĬhinese Fine Black: STHeiti Light