Dear Bryan,
Looks like you have listed the four most usable Tipitakas online. I'm also
looking for the Laotian Canon, and also the Khmer Canon, not sure if either
has been digitalized. Again I'm not sure if the Vietnamese have a Pali
Canon.
There is the Sutta Central which is very useful in showing correspondences
between the Pali texts and other ancient languages:
http://www.suttacentral.net/. You might already know about this.
With metta,
Piya
On Sat, Apr 30, 2011 at 11:38 PM, Bryan Levman <bryan.levman@...>wrote:
>
>
> Hello All,
>
> I am sending the below email again, as I am not sure it got through. My
> copy ended up in my SPAM folder for some reason,
>
> Bryan
>
> Dear Friends,
>
> I have been looking into the various editions of the canon available:
>
> 1) there is the Burmese sixth council Chaṭṭha Saṅgaayana,
> www.tipitaka.org/romn/
>
> 2) the Sri Lanka Jayanti edition, www.bodhgayanews.net/pali.htm
>
> 3) the Thailand edition, www.tipitakastudies.net/tipitaka/11M/3/3.8
>
> Is anyone aware of the Cambodian edition and whether this is on line?
>
> Also I have come across something called PALI TEXT version 1.0: CD-ROM
> Database of the Entire Buddhist Pali Canon which I believe is the PTS
> edition. Does anyone know if this is available on line? or must it be
> purchased?
>
> Has anyone ever seen an edition of the Laos or Vietnamese canon?
>
> Thanks for your help,
>
> Metta,
>
> Bryan
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
--
The Minding Centre
Blk 644 Bukit Batok Central #01-68 (2nd flr)
Singapore 650644
hpl: 8211 0879
Meditation courses & therapy: http://themindingcentre.org
Sutta translation: https://dharmafarer.org
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]