Kickstarter 2013 Revisited

Geoff Canyon gcanyon at gmail.com
Mon May 11 08:32:49 EDT 2015


I suppose so, yes. For example, Fruit Ninja: the version I have installed
may use unicode, as you say, but all its characters are plain english/ascii
characters. But maybe there's a Lithuanian Fruit Ninja where unicode is
needed? I don't know.

On Mon, May 11, 2015 at 1:29 AM, Monte Goulding <monte at sweattechnologies.com
> wrote:

>
> > On 11 May 2015, at 4:24 pm, Geoff Canyon <gcanyon at gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > This is why I asked, hoping for a response from someone who shops the
> Greek
> > app store, or the Japanese app store. Those are the ones who would know
> the
> > percentage.
>
> What percentage are you looking for? All native apps would use unicode
> because that’s the encoding of the strings files. Whether they are
> internationalised is probably what you mean… is it? Are you wondering the
> percentage of apps that are internationalised with different text for each
> language?
>
> Cheers
>
> Monte
>
> --
> M E R Goulding <http://goulding.ws/>
> Software development services
> Bespoke application development for vertical markets
>
> mergExt <http://mergext.com/> - There's an external for that!
>
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