In my native country of Myanmar, we have been using a non-Unicode compliant font (called Zawgyi) for about 10 years on all private, commercial and government websites and electronic communications, but it has caused numerous problems when it comes to reading the text on multiple devices, as every device needs to have this Zawgyi font installed.
Now, the government has decided that enough is enough and that we all must now stop using Zawgyi and switch to using Unicode complaint Myanmar font and people have been switching to it when generating new text.
However, this means that all the previously written text until now remain in Zawgyi and all new text are in Unicode. So the problem now is when you want to go back and read all previous text (in websites and social media, like Facebook, Twitter, etc.) the text appears gibberish.
I've searched this website and someone posted a similar question about 9 years ago and was told that it was not possible. I'm just wondering if that's still the case or can it be done now?
So, what I'm after is some simple way, i.e. a small toggle button that can be placed on the toolbar/address bar of the web browser, and when you click on it, it changes the browser language to Zawgyi, allowing me to read old text written in that font, and then click on the button again to switch back to the default, i.e. Unicode.
In effeect, that the script is going to do is what I would do manually, i.e. go to Settings, choose Customise font and then select either Zawgyi (which would be already installed on the machine) or the default Times Roman.
Any help or tips would be greatly appreciated. If such a script exists and only works on one specific browser and not all then that's fine too.
Thanks
Nanda Won
@font-faceso the devices don't need the font installed. This assumes you have control of the web site serving the content.