On Sun, May 06, 2012 at 06:36:36PM -0700, Asmus Freytag wrote:
First question:
When the integral symbols were encoded in Unicode there was
discussion of the fact that these were deliberately unifying an
upright and a slanted style of integral.
Now, I'm pretty sure that I've seen both
From: Asmus Freytag asm...@ix.netcom.com
To: Unicode Mailing List unicode@unicode.org
Sent: Monday, 7 May 2012, 1:36
Subject: Variant glyphs for mathematical symbols
First question:
When the integral symbols were encoded in Unicode there was
discussion
From: Asmus Freytag asm...@ix.netcom.com
To: Unicode Mailing List unicode@unicode.org
Sent: Monday, 7 May 2012, 1:36
Subject: Variant glyphs for mathematical symbols
Second question:
When the mathematical relations were encoded there were
variants that were
:* Monday, 7 May 2012, 1:36
*Subject:* Variant glyphs for mathematical symbols
First question:
When the integral symbols were encoded in Unicode there was
discussion of the fact that these were deliberately unifying an
upright and a slanted style of integral.
Now, I'm pretty sure that I've seen both
2012-05-07 20:17, Asmus Freytag wrote:
Where can I lay my hands of a font that contains slanted integrals?
The following fonts, among others, seem to have a more or less slanted
shape for INTEGRAL “∫” U+222B:
Asana Math, http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/fonts/Asana-Math/
Cambria Math (the
First question:
When the integral symbols were encoded in Unicode there was
discussion of the fact that these were deliberately unifying an
upright and a slanted style of integral.
Now, I'm pretty sure that I've seen both styles in print at
some point, but I can't seem to find any TrueType or
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