Edward Cherlin wrote: >On Monday 31 March 2003 10:05 pm, Jungshik Shin wrote: > > >>>>>Let's try some more. >>>>>á̀ế̀̀î́̀ổ́̀̀û̀̀n̂́̀x̂̉́̀̀ >>>>> >>>>> > >I'm pleased that the accents are still there after four levels of >replies. >
That's because all three of us (Gaspar, you and I) do what we preach, namely, using UTF-8 in our everyday computing :-) >>>>>Not too bad, except that only the first three accents on >>>>>each letter are actually displayed, and the dot on the i >>>>>isn't removed. >>>>> >>>>> >> Hmm, I can see only two diacritics in Kwrite with Code2000 >> >> > >Yes, I get only two visible diacriticswith Code2000. > I think Code2000 has some (maybe not so comprehensive) ot layout tables for Latin letters. I'm copying this to its author, James Kass. >>font. I found that you appended as many as five of them to >>each character in your sample. What font did you use? >>Nonetheless, it's a pleasant surprise that Kwrite does more >>than simple overstriking. >> >> > >kwrite 4.0 >kde 3.0.3 >Arial Unicode MS (licensed copy) shows 3 diacritics > > Can you check your font with VOLT (www.microsoft.com/typography) as to whether it has OT layout tables for Latin letters? You need to apply to join the OT developer group to get a copy. It seems to be the only tool available for editing OT layout table. I hope pfaedit will offer the feature, soon. >kmail 1.4.3 >Courier [Adobe] >3 diacritics displayed > > Courier? Hmm. How about 'Courier' in kwrite? So, are multiple diacritics stacked over each other taking *disjoint* spaces instead of overlapping one another at the same spot? Anyway, now I'm wondering what Qt/KDE use for rendering. Does it use pango(it couldn't be because Pango doesn't support OT layout table for Latin, yet although simple overstriking is supported) or has their own complex script rendering library? Jungshik -- Linux-UTF8: i18n of Linux on all levels Archive: http://mail.nl.linux.org/linux-utf8/