fj.sci.lang.japaneseの記事<bglosg$fmf$1@bagan.srce.hr>で
        necu@vise-poslovne-ponude.fak-ofさんは書きました。
> i understand there are fonts, but do they contain kanji or just
> katakana/hirigana?

Japanese fonts contain kanji as well as hiragana/katakana.
Hiragana/katakana both consist of 50 characters plus some extra.
Kanji consists of some southand of characters.

> plz, if enyone can explain how do you japanese people write japanese on your
> PC's, i would be very greatful.

We have Japanese keyboards.  On which there are hiraganas
on the keytops.  You can input a hiragana on the keytop directly
in the hiragana mode, or you can input a hiragana with ASCII
characters in romaji sequence with some help of an IME (Input
Method Editor) in the romaji mode.  In latter case you don't
need any Japanese keyboards.

Once hiraganas are entered, they are not "commited" (passed to
an application) yet. They are under control of the IME (shown
in underline or reverse mode).  You can press Enter to commit
and pass them to an application, or you can press Space (or other
conversion key) to convert those hiragana text into kanji/
hiragana/katakana text and then commit the converted text.
If you are not satisfied with the converted string (wrong kanji,
wrong word separation, etc.), you should press space to get
another candidate for the word or press left/right arrow keys
to move to the point where you need some correction.

Umm, what I wrote above is only a brief sketch of the way with
Japanese text input.  Is it clear enough?
-- 
太田純(Junn Ohta) (株)リコー/新横浜事業所
ohta@sdg.mdd.ricoh.co.jp