Am 28.02.2014 um 20:41 schrieb Joshua Krämer <joshua.krae...@gmail.com>:

> On 2014-02-26, 23:13, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
> 
>> 2. When you apply your “testfeature” to a certain font alternative
>> (e.g. italic) it will work.
>> [...]
> 
> Thanks.  It's a bit inconvenient, because for each feature you want to
> apply, you have to define a separate typeface.  Is it a bug, or is it
> intended to be like that?

This is something only Hans can answer, what I wanted to show you is
that the problem isn’t related to the \definefontfamily command.

> (I understand that this feature may not be needed often.  I need it to
> apply different stretch values to a typeface I'm designing for testing
> purposes.)


Is there any real purpose for this feature? The letters in the second and third
line don’t look beautiful because the horizontal and vertical strokes don’t 
match.

\definefontfeature [wide]   [extend=1.50]
\definefontfeature [narrow] [extend=0.75]

\definefontfamily [one]   [serif] [Latin Modern Roman]
\definefontfamily [two]   [serif] [Latin Modern Roman] [features={default,wide}]
\definefontfamily [three] [serif] [Latin Modern Roman] 
[features={default,narrow}]

\definebodyfontenvironment[50pt]

\starttext

\switchtobodyfont[one,50pt]Stretched

\switchtobodyfont[two,50pt]Stretched

\switchtobodyfont[three,50pt]Stretched

\stoptext

Wolfgang
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