On Wed, Jan 03, 2018 at 10:10:18PM -0700, Anthony J. Bentley wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 13, 2017 at 11:48 PM, Anthony J. Bentley <anth...@anjbe.name> 
> wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Hanazono is a Ming-style Japanese font containing over 100,000 characters
> > defined in the ISO/IEC 10646 standard / the Unicode standard.
> >
> > It is divided into two files:
> >
> > - HanaMinA.ttf, containing:
> >   - Non-kanji
> >   - CJK Unified Ideographs (URO, URO+, Ext.A)
> >   - CJK Compatibility Ideographs (with Supplement)
> >   - Kanji chars defined in JIS X 0213:2004
> >   - IVD (with base chars in SIP)
> >   - Table of General Standard Chinese Characters
> >   - HKSCS (Hong Kong Supplementary Character Set)
> >   - CDP-EUDC
> >
> > - HanaMinB.ttf, containing:
> >   - CJK Unified Ideographs (Ext.B, Ext.C, Ext.D, Ext.E, Ext.F)
> >
> >
> > ok?
> 
> Ping?

Here's a place you can try out the CJK extensions for reading pre-modern 
Chinese texts. It recommends Hanazono. I have to confess, I installed the font 
manually but if you need a justification for the port perhaps this is it: 
http://ctext.org/font-test-page
Peter

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