I've been puzzled for a while because my TL2010 distribution appears to load
Babel by default very early in the format file.
E.g.,:
$ xelatex
This is XeTeX, Version 3.1415926-2.2-0.9997.4 (TeX Live 2010)
restricted \write18 enabled.
**\relax
entering extended mode
LaTeX2e 2009/09/24
Babel
Dominik Wujastyk wrote:
I've been puzzled for a while because my TL2010 distribution appears to
load Babel by default very early in the format file.
E.g.,:
$ xelatex
This is XeTeX, Version 3.1415926-2.2-0.9997.4 (TeX Live 2010)
restricted \write18 enabled.
**\relax
When xelatex is building it's format file, it gets to loading latex.ltx.
That contains
\InputIfFileExists{hyphen.cfg}
{\typeout{===^^J%
Local configuration file hyphen.cfg used^^J%
Am 23.11.2010 um 04:32 schrieb Vladimir Lomov:
P.S. Something wrong with your TL setup because here I could compile
the file without such messages. May be you switch off support for some
languages?
Yes, that's true! I did not think of this and assumed a failure in
polyglossia...
--
On Tue, Nov 23, 2010 at 01:00, Manuel B. wrote:
If Indic scripts hyphenate in the same way in all the languages that
use the script
I've seen no evidence to let me think that they do, but I'm happy
about any input.
Hmm... I think this discussion could be brought to an end more quickly
by
I don't think this started at TL 2010, Dominik; I have recollections
of seeing Babel mentioned early in the log file in earlier releases,
That has always been the case. What it really means is that
hyphenation patterns have been loaded in the format, not that the Babel
package is being used.
There are two hyphen.cfg files in TL2010, one for babel and one for luatex.
Indeed, and the second one has been designed so as *not* to load
hyphenation patterns when generating formats, because it is possible in
LuaTeX to load patterns on the fly, unlike in any other TeX engine.
This means
Maybe the problem is related to my version of Linux Libertine fonts? I'm
using version 4.4.1-4 from Ubuntu 10.04 repository.
It seems to be the OpenType version, because I need to specify Linux
Libertine O to find the fonts.
So modifying your test document accordingly:
% !TEX TS-program =
On Nov 23, 2010, at 6:22 PM, Maxim Cournoyer wrote:
Maybe the problem is related to my version of Linux Libertine fonts? I'm
using version 4.4.1-4 from Ubuntu 10.04 repository.
It seems to be the OpenType version, because I need to specify Linux
Libertine O to find the fonts.
Howdy,
Could
On 23 nov. 2010, at 07:01, Karl Berry wrote:
I did not actually try it, but Thanh told me that character protrusion
is in fact implemented in the XeTeX that is in TL 2010. He and Jonathan
worked on getting it merged.
Good news!
So I tried it by adding \usepackage[verbose]{microtype}
to a
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