MAXQDA offers some new features that allow it to analyze texts in
Arabic, Greek, Hebrew and Cyrillic language. Not only the text but also
the codes and memos can be written in these languages. In-vivo-coding
and lexical text search is also possible.
More information will be given in an announcement that will be done in
the next days.
Udo Kuckartz
___________________________________________________________________
Prof. Dr. Udo Kuckartz
Institut fuer Erziehungswissenschaft
Philipps-Universitaet Marburg
D-35032 Marburg
Phone ++49 (0)6421 282 3024 (2823026 Secr.)
Fax ++49 (0)6421 282 2823
http://www.empirische-paedagogik.de
http://staff-www.uni-marburg.de/~kuckartz
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: qual-software [mailto:[log in to unmask]] Im Auftrag von
Rodney Jones
Gesendet: Montag, 25. November 2002 15:58
An: [log in to unmask]
Betreff: Re: Unicode text analysis software
I use WinMax for working with Chinese texts. It works well on Chinese
Windows or with English Win 98 and a shell program like NJ Star or
RIchWin. Also works on Win XP without a shell program--English XP
supports Chinese characters. Tried Atlas on Win 98 some time ago, but it
messed up my Chinese text. Things might be different in XP. Hope this
helps.
Rodney Jones
City University of Hong Kong
-----Original Message-----
From: qual-software [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of
Harald Klein
Sent: Monday, November 25, 2002 10:53 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Unicode text analysis software
Chaoliang Yang wrote:
> Will Atlas/ti 6 implement Uni-Code support? Or are there any QDA
software
> that support non-european languages (like Chinese)?
As far as I know there are very few programmes that support Unicode.
First, Unicode is not directly by Win98/ME and earlier versions of it,
so you must run Win2000 or Win XP.
The only program that could do (as far as I remember) is Kura, but this
is more a data bank program than QDA software. For the link, have a look
at http://www.textanalysis.info.
I am in contact with many colleagues who also writes software, quite a
few have versions for non-European languages, but not for syllable based
languages like Chinese, Japanese, or Korean. There is also a system for
japanese called KHcoder, but I don't know whether it fits for Chinese
also (if KHcoder is for kanji and/or katakana only, this will not be the
case).
HTH
Harald Klein
------------------------
Dr. Harald Klein
Social Science Consulting
Brückengasse 12
07407 Rudolstadt
Germany
Tel/Fax: +49 3672 488494
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