Mac OS X Server uses the Unicode character set. Unicode lets applications handle thousands of characters from multiple languages, including Japanese, simultanously.
Note: Mac OS X Server provides the transmission-friendly format of Unicode (UTF8) as the default system encoding.
To provide backward compatibility and inter-operability on other platforms, Mac OS X Server allows users to configure the system's default character encoding. The system character encoding setting governs how Mac OS X Server treats "plain text" files, filename character encoding, and application-specific default character encoding configurations such as MailViewer's default character encoding for plain text messages.
Because the default setting is Mac OS Roman, US and Western European users typically do not neeed to change the encoding setting. On the other hand, Japanese users should set their system default encoding to Japanese EUC. Setup Assistant automatically sets the configuration to Japanese EUC if the user select Japanese as the system language.
When you switch to a Japanese setting, the following components change their default character encoding handling:
The following new features have been added for Japanese text handling.
Workspace Manager now opens and initializes the user's default input server when the user logs in to the server. This reduces the delay before opening the input server the first time. The Canna Japanese Input Method is initialized if the system language is set to Japanese.
Setup Assistant now configures the default system character encoding to Japanese EUC if the system language is set to Japanese.
Apple JIS keyboard support
On Apple JIS keyboards, typing the Yen (¥) key generates a backslash (\\) character. To enter the Yen symbol, type Option+Y.
For the best look and performance, you should change the font settings to use Japanese fonts using the Appearance control panel.
You cannot select fixed variants of the Heisei fonts for the Fixed Pitch Font setting.
For the Japanese Mac OS, the startup disk image requires at least 150 MB of disk space, not 100 MB as mentioned in About Mac OS Compatibility.