On 2010-10-07 12:28+0100 Steve Schwartz wrote:
Hi Alan,
On Wed, 2010-10-06 at 18:14 +0100, Alan W. Irwin wrote:
Furthermore, I think your best workaround is not to fiddle with the
Hershey to unicode transformation yourself (since that implies you
would have to patch PLplot indefinitely),
On 2010-10-05 15:18-0700 Alan W. Irwin wrote:
Note also these Greek-letter variations are all available in the same
font. So it is not a matter of suddenly changing fonts in the middle
of a string. Instead, it is using the same font with different Hershey
and therefore UCS4 indices
Hi Alan
Ok as I suspected it is a qt issue and I agree that the qt3 Oct 2010, at 21:01,
dabergs...@comcast. guys mostly make positive improvements - although the
migration of our code from Qt3 to Qt4 was far from painless. Since we bundle
plplot with our software and deal with a variety of
On 2010-10-05 20:29+0100 Schwartz, Steven J wrote:
Should plplot draw it's Greek theta from a script-like font when all
the other Greek symbols (bar uppercase upsilon) are drawn from the
default sans serif font? Would it look strange to a Greek person to
see a word spelled with this mixture of