Derek and Dimitry,

I often forget most of the internet still uses Microsoft IE
which is not W3C/Unicode compliant. You are correct then, to
support IE, you may need to declare a number of Unicode fonts.
Explicitly telling IE that a page is UTF-8/Unicode doesn't seem
to work.

May I suggest: http://www.mozilla.org/products/firefox/

Firefox displayed the proper pali characters for most of the
code you (Dimitry) used.

http://alex.voodooglobe.com/tmp/DimitryPaliEx.png

Please view this (updated) link and test to see that the pali
diacritics display correctly. Please tell me (in private email
if you prefer) what browser and platform (Linux, Windows, Mac)
you are using. The ~n and ~N do not seem to be displaying
correctly; I'll look into that.

http://alex.voodooglobe.com/alex/043/29/paliunicode.html

Alex



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