Am Fri, 8 Jul 2011 15:29:21 +1000 schrieb Vafa Khalighi:
Several users has reported that xetex and xelatex included in MikTeX 2.9
(and perhaps MiKTeX 2.8) is buggy. The minimal document is:
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{fontspec}
\setmainfont[Script=Arabic,Mapping=parsidigits]{XB
On Thu, Jul 7, 2011 at 10:08 AM, Ulrike Fischer ne...@nililand.de wrote:
Am Thu, 7 Jul 2011 12:13:21 +0200 schrieb Mojca Miklavec:
Thanks a lot for the answer. Actually, the looping itself is not a
problem. I was trying to modify Will Robertson's document
I'm creating some hyphenation rules for Jarai texts that I'm
interlinearizing. Here's the problem: In various texts, a complex character
such as LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH BREVE might be encoded as a single code
point (U+0103) or as a combination of code points (LATIN SMALL LETTER A:
U+0061 plus
On Fri, 8 Jul 2011 15:00:42 -0500, Joshua and Amy josh.ruth...@gmail.com
wrote:
I'm creating some hyphenation rules for Jarai texts that I'm
interlinearizing. Here's the problem: In various texts, a complex
character
such as LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH BREVE might be encoded as a single
code
So, I guess I was foolish to hope that Google has figured out how to return
results that have non-identical but equivalent strings?
I hope it's not too off-topic for this list, but can you point me to any
good resources on normalization (is there a straightforward automation for
someone who
Unicode normalization was discussed on this list a couple of months ago.
Phil Taylor provided a small program to do the job, and other utilities were
referred to. There's also a command within XeTeX that normalizes unicode
before passing it to TeX's digestion. Try this in your header:
%
On Fri, 8 Jul 2011 15:50:07 -0500, Joshua and Amy josh.ruth...@gmail.com
wrote:
So, I guess I was foolish to hope that Google has figured out how to
return
results that have non-identical but equivalent strings?
I'm sure google has figured this out, and some programs to an automatic
conversion
This is a better answer than mine, so disregard my noise. But I do have a
question below:
On Fri, 8 Jul 2011 23:13:41 +0200, Dominik Wujastyk wujas...@gmail.com
wrote:
...
There's also a command within XeTeX that normalizes unicode
before passing it to TeX's digestion. Try this in your
On 8 Jul 2011, at 23:24, maxwell wrote:
I found \XeTeXinputnormalization in XeTeX documentation, but I'm not
familiar with the other two commands. I guess \tracingonline=1 means to
output errors to stdout (or stderr?), but where is the effect of
\tracinglostchars described?
See The TeXbook,
Many, thanks, all, and sorry for missing the earlier discussion.
But back to my original question, is there a way to get \hyphenation to
require only one form and the rest come for free?
On Fri, Jul 8, 2011 at 5:37 PM, Jonathan Kew jfkth...@googlemail.comwrote:
On 8 Jul 2011, at 23:24, maxwell
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