That question explains how an Android device displays a glyph (not characters) on screen and the software components that are involved in that process. Take a look at a similar question that I had asked which is not very different from what you had asked, if the language specific features and names are not accounted. This topping layer will usually be cosmetic changes by the manufacturer like HTC Sense UI etc.Įven if there are no such topping layer, the manufacturers compile the source of vanilla ROM with suitable drivers of their devices and add slight country specific enhancements. Other Android devices will have some sort of topping layer over this vanilla layers. As you are probably aware the vanilla Android is as such available as a stock option only to Google's own devices (The Nexus series). As t0mm13b had said, Android as a framework does support Unicode.
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