Can someone please explain why is it that if I compile the document:
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{fontspec,lmodern}
\usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
\begin{document}
«A»
\end{document}
what I get is
ńAż
instead of
«A» ?
Because you're using fontenc. Don't. Just let
Am Wed, 08 Jun 2011 11:31:48 +0100 schrieb José Carlos Santos:
Hi all,
Can someone please explain why is it that if I compile the document:
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{fontspec,lmodern}
\usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
\begin{document}
«A»
\end{document}
what I get is
ńAż
On Jun 8, 2011, at 5:31 AM, José Carlos Santos wrote:
Hi all,
Can someone please explain why is it that if I compile the document:
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{fontspec,lmodern}
\usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
\begin{document}
«A»
\end{document}
what I get is
ńAż
instead of
In order to choose the right fontface for my document, I want to make a
test.
My purpose is to get a document like this :
Font 1 :
abcde...
Font 2 :
abcde...
Font 3 :
abcde
Is it possible to do this in a short way ?
Jean-Louis Cordonnier
--
Le 08/06/2011 13:14, Jean-Louis Cordonnier a écrit :
In order to choose the right fontface for my document, I want to make a
test.
My purpose is to get a document like this :
Font 1 :
abcde...
Font 2 :
abcde...
Font 3 :
abcde
Is it possible to do this in a short way ?
If I understand you
Am Wed, 08 Jun 2011 13:14:13 +0200 schrieb Jean-Louis Cordonnier:
In order to choose the right fontface for my document, I want to make a
test.
My purpose is to get a document like this :
Font 1 :
abcde...
Font 2 :
abcde...
Font 3 :
abcde
Is it possible to do this in a short way ?
Am Wed, 8 Jun 2011 05:54:27 -0500 schrieb Herbert Schulz:
and certainly don't use the fontenc package.
There is no problem to *use* fontenc with xelatex. fontspec is
actually loading itself. And I'm loading it to use my chess fonts.
The problem is that by loading it with the option T1 *after*
Ulrike Fischer wrote:
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{fontspec}
\begin{document}
\fontspec{Arial} abc \fontspec{Cambria} abc
\end{document}
Or perhaps, to get even closer to the desideratum :
\documentclass {article}
\usepackage {fontspec}
\long \def \SelectFont #1%
{
Apologies for the spurious blank lines in the
preceding; I accidentally had Format mails in
HTML enabled. Now turned off, and re-attached.
\documentclass {article}
\usepackage {fontspec}
\long \def \SelectFont #1%
{
\par
\fontspec {Arial}\leftline {#1 :}
\noindent
If I remember correctly, I thought that there is in fact a \quote-command or
something similar in latex which will produce the correct quotation marks for
the currently active language. I remember that we had a lengthy discussion
about that once on the Dutch latex list, but I forgot the details
On Wednesday 08 June 2011 05:49 PM, Wilfred van Rooijen wrote:
If I remember correctly, I thought that there is in fact a
\quote-command or something similar in latex which will produce the
correct quotation marks for the currently active language. I remember
that we had a lengthy discussion
On 08-06-2011 15:32, Diederick C. Niehorster wrote:
The default font used by fontspec is latin modern, which is what you
get. To change to another font, read the manual of fontspec (google it
or use texdoc fontspec on the command line) which will show how to use
it.
It says that I should use
Am Wed, 08 Jun 2011 15:54:44 +0100 schrieb José Carlos Santos:
The default font used by fontspec is latin modern, which is what you
get. To change to another font, read the manual of fontspec (google it
or use texdoc fontspec on the command line) which will show how to use
it.
It says
On 08-06-2011 16:27, Ulrike Fischer wrote:
The default font used by fontspec is latin modern, which is what you
get. To change to another font, read the manual of fontspec (google it
or use texdoc fontspec on the command line) which will show how to use
it.
It says that I should use the
14 matches
Mail list logo