![japanese applocale gibberish japanese applocale gibberish](https://i.imgur.com/xZwxk0A.png)
txt files, which turns to gibberish without the locale change, so I am unsure what will work and what wont. So adding those three extensions will emulate Korean, Chinese, Japanese support for that program in this case Winamp. NOTE that some plugins may not work without Japanese local or AppLocale.
Japanese applocale gibberish code#
That part in red is the code for the language *In this case L0412 been Korean* that you wanted Applocale to emulate and such, so you can add more to it to support more lnuage e.g. UPDATE: The new WineLocale 0. I will try to provide support and answer questions in the thread, but if you somehow type something wrong and send your OS spiraling into /dev/null, dont blame me. "C:\WINDOWS\AppPatch\AppLoc.exe "C:\Program Files\Winamp\winamp.exe" "/L0412"" The system I tested it on was 32-bit Ubuntu Feisty 7.04. Then click Propertys, a box will open and in that box there will be a part named "Target" there will be something similer to this: *Of course things will change depending on where you installed it, and where the program is* Be careful though, because it will change quite a few things in your system. NTLEA and Applocale is no longer supported so you shouldn’t use those. Not sure about compatibility, but it seems to be doing quite well. Does the same thing as setting your system locale to Japanese except now it’s much easier. It is listed as 'Change Display Language' under 'Clock, Language, and Region' category in Control Panel. New tool called Locale Emulator (windows). It should look something like this when you right click on the short cut For non-Unicode support, you need to change your System Locale to Chinese and need to restart your computer. *It will be in the Microsoft Applocale folder in the start menu* So when run a program though Applocale and it ask's you if you would like to make a sort cut to that program, Pick Yes.