Microsoft® Office XP Resource Kit

microsoft.com Home  
Microsoft
http://www.microsoft.com/office/ork  

    Office Resource Kit
    Toolbox
    Getting Started
    Deployment
    Maintenance
    Worldwide Deployment
    Messaging
    Site Index
    Glossary
Office Resource Kit / Worldwide Deployment / Preparing Users' Computers for International Use
Topics in this chapter
  Choosing an Operating System  
  Choosing a Web Browser  
  Administering Fonts  
  Printing Documents  
 

Choosing a Web Browser

The Web browser installed on users' computers can affect how well Microsoft Office XP supports switching to different user interface languages. In addition, browsers that support Unicode® allow users to create multilingual Web pages.

Supporting multilingual dialog boxes

Microsoft Internet Explorer 5 allows Microsoft Office XP applications to display certain dialog boxes in any user interface language that the operating system supports. Dialog boxes such as New and Open from the File menu depend on the code page of the operating system to display text.

A minimum installation of Internet Explorer 5 allows users to switch to different user interface languages regardless of the code page. Without Internet Explorer 5, users might see meaningless characters in dialog boxes after changing user interface languages.


Note   If users are switching between languages that use the same code page — for example, all Western European languages — they do not need to install Internet Explorer 5 to display all dialog boxes properly.


If you want users to be able to change their user interface language across code pages, but you do not want a full-featured installation of Internet Explorer 5 on users' computers, you can customize Office Setup with a minimum installation of Internet Explorer 5.

To customize Office Setup with a minimum installation of Internet Explorer 5

  • In the Customize IE5 Installation Options page of the Office Custom Installation Wizard, select the Upgrade to Internet Explorer 5 option, and in the Internet Explorer 5 upgrade mode box, select Minimum.


Note   After installing Internet Explorer 5, users must turn Microsoft Active Desktop® off before they can change their user interface language.


Using Unicode in multilingual Web pages

Unicode allows users to create multilingual Web pages that not only use multiple scripts but also produce smaller files that are easy to parse on your intranet. You need Internet Explorer 4.01 or later, or Netscape Navigator 4.03 or later for your browser to interpret Unicode Web pages. If you want to maintain compatibility with earlier browsers, avoid using Unicode.


Note   The Unicode format commonly used on the Internet is called Universal Character Set Transformation Format 8-bit (UTF-8). UTF-8 is the only Unicode format that is commonly supported by Web browsers and by Microsoft FrontPage Server Extensions.


You can set Office XP applications to save the current HTML document in Unicode.

To save an HTML document in Unicode in Office XP applications

  1. Click Tools, Options.

  2. On the General tab, click Web Options.

  3. On the Encoding tab, in the Save this document as list, select Unicode (UTF-8).


Note   To save HTML documents in the Unicode format by default, select the Always save Web pages in the default encoding check box in the Web Options dialog box.


Using Unicode in multilingual URLs

In addition to allowing users to create HTML documents in UTF-8 encoding, Office XP and Internet Explorer 5 can send UTF-8 encoded URLs to Web servers.

UTF-8 encoding allows users to use URLs that include non-ASCII characters, regardless of the language of the user's operating system and browser, or the language version of Office. Without UTF-8 encoding, a user's Web server must be based on the same code page as that of the user's operating system in order for the Web server to interpret non-ASCII URLs. However, for a Web server to interpret UTF-8 encoded URLs, the Web server must have UTF-8 support.


Note   To use UTF-8 encoded URLs, you must have Microsoft Internet Information Server (IIS) 4.0 or later or another Web server that supports UTF-8.


If your organization has code page–based Web servers that do not support UTF-8, and you have non-ASCII URLs, you should turn off UTF-8 URL encoding in Internet Explorer 5. Otherwise, when users try to use a UTF-8–encoded URL that includes non-ASCII characters, the code page–based Web server that does not support UTF-8 cannot interpret the URL.

To prevent sending URLs in UTF-8 encoding

  1. In Internet Explorer 5, on the Tools menu, click Internet Options.

  2. In the Internet Options dialog box, click the Advanced tab.

  3. Under Browsing, clear the Always send URLs as UTF-8 check box.

See also

Documents that use Unicode are easier to share among users who work in different languages. For more information about Unicode, see Unicode Support and Multilingual Documents..

To display localized server messages, you must install a localized version of Microsoft FrontPage Server Extensions. For information about the latest release of FrontPage Server Extensions 2002 in a particular language, see the Microsoft FrontPage Web site at http://www.microsoft.com/frontpage/.

To display localized messages for servers running SharePoint™ Team Services from Microsoft, you must install a localized version of SharePoint Team Services. For information about the latest release of Microsoft's SharePoint Team Services in a particular language, see the SharePoint Team Services Web site. Information about the SharePoint Team Services Web site is available in this topic on the Office Resource Kit Web site at http://www.microsoft.com/office/ork/.


Top

 
© 2001 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of use.
License