(it is a bit of a pity that support for indic scripts is such a weird mix of font technology and engine dependent reshuffling ... probably also driven by limitations of open type at that time)>

When using these fonts regularly, one notices very erratic formatting phenomena that must have to do with the Devanagarī font, or its interaction with (Xe)TeX. Perhaps this is the same phenomenon
seen from the user side.

In my case things improved when I switched to Adishila (in XeTeX):

\newfontfamily\sanskritfont[Script=Devanagari,Mapping=RomDev,Scale=1.45]{AdishilaSan}

This is, to my taste, the nicest Sanskrit font, but it is difficult to decide between Adishila and
Shobhika.

The Murty font is also quite good, but it is commercial and cannot be used for book production. I asked whether there was a way to get a licence, but at the time this was impossible. But the font team there recommended ``Sanskrit Text'' (Sansk.ttf) which is one of their products that made it into a Microsoft Windows Standard font (I am not using Windows). It is also very good, but Adishila
works better for me.

I cannot say how thrilled I am about the Indic support, thanks a lot to Kaushika!

Best
Jürgen


----- Nachricht von kauśika via ntg-context <ntg-context@ntg.nl> ---------
     Datum: Sat, 22 Jan 2022 16:08:10 +0530
       Von: kauśika via ntg-context <ntg-context@ntg.nl>
Antwort an: mailing list for ConTeXt users <ntg-context@ntg.nl>
   Betreff: Re: [NTG-context] new upload
        An: mailing list for ConTeXt users <ntg-context@ntg.nl>
        Cc: kauśika <citt...@gmail.com>


On Saturday, January 22, 2022 3:55:12 PM IST Hans Hagen via ntg-context wrote:
Is there a font out there that supports all these scripts in one font?

Shobhika font is a free font that has some of the largest number of glyphs
(i.e has many conjuncts) for the Devanagari script.
https://github.com/Sandhi-IITBombay/Shobhika

The font also has a good Latin component based on PT Serif. This Latin part
has good support for the roman (IAST) transliteration for Sanskrit. But
strictly only the IAST spec character for Sanskrit are available.

It also has glyphs for some commonly used mathematical symbols.

Noto Serif Devanagari is also decent for just Devanagari (not sure of the IAST
part).

As for Sans typefaces, Mukta Devanagari is a free font:
https://github.com/EkType/Mukta

Of these, Shobhika has the best conjunct coverage. I will shortly update the
wiki with a much more exhaustive list and report here.

kauśika


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---

Prof. Dr. Juergen Hanneder
Philipps-Universitaet Marburg
FG Indologie u. Tibetologie
Deutschhausstr.12
35032 Marburg
Germany
Tel. 0049-6421-28-24930
hanne...@staff.uni-marburg.de

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