URL:
  <https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?67234>

                 Summary: [devpdf] glyphs in new SS font sit slightly above
the baseline
                   Group: GNU roff
               Submitter: gbranden
               Submitted: Mon 23 Jun 2025 11:44:21 PM GMT
                Category: Font devpdf
                Severity: 2 - Minor
              Item Group: Rendering/Cosmetics
                  Status: None
                 Privacy: Public
             Assigned to: deri
             Open/Closed: Open
         Discussion Lock: Any
         Planned Release: None


    _______________________________________________________

Follow-up Comments:


-------------------------------------------------------
Date: Mon 23 Jun 2025 11:44:21 PM GMT By: G. Branden Robinson <gbranden>
Input:


$ cat ATTIC/greek-letters.groff
\Z'\[*a]\[*b]\[*g]'\l'3m\[ru]' \*[.T]


When rendering for 'ps' vs. 'pdf', I notice that in the latter, the Greek
letters seem to sit ever so slightly above the baseline.

I assume that this is an issue in the (embedded) font itself.

Can this be fixed in "StandardSymSL.pfb"?

Screenshots attached.






    _______________________________________________________
File Attachments:


-------------------------------------------------------
Name: groff_SS_font_ps.png  Size: 3KiB
<https://file.savannah.gnu.org/file/groff_SS_font_ps.png?file_id=57318>
-------------------------------------------------------
Name: groff_SS_font_pdf.png  Size: 6KiB
<https://file.savannah.gnu.org/file/groff_SS_font_pdf.png?file_id=57319>

    AGPL NOTICE

These attachments are served by Savane. You can download the corresponding
source code of Savane at
https://savannah.gnu.org/source/savane-26b05704c291d0b2ed3d7696105905945a8b3ae2.tar.gz

    _______________________________________________________

Reply to this item at:

  <https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?67234>

_______________________________________________
Message sent via Savannah
https://savannah.gnu.org/

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: PGP signature

Reply via email to