On Fri 4th Jun, 2010 at 23:18, Peter Dyballa seems to have written:
Am 31.05.2010 um 23:31 schrieb cfr...@imapmail.org:
Attached: source and pdf
The effect is certainly Tiger based.
I used the Venturis fonts from TeX Live 2008 and 2009 (the files have not
changed between release
Am 31.05.2010 um 23:31 schrieb cfr...@imapmail.org:
Attached: source and pdf
The effect is certainly Tiger based.
I used the Venturis fonts from TeX Live 2008 and 2009 (the files have
not changed between release dates). I cleared font and application
caches before switching to the
The faulty display of some characters on top of each other on Mac OS
looks very much like what I've experienced with my pig latin font
Entiumgay. In that font, my suspicion was that it's related to the
numerous AAT glyph insertions and deletions (glyph deletion means
replacement by the
On Tue 1st Jun, 2010 at 06:48, Ross Moore seems to have written:
Fontspec also gives you the option to tell XeTeX the particular font file
to be used. Try that for ADF Venturis!
How is this done?
When I put in a full path, as in
Am 31.05.2010 um 23:31 schrieb cfr...@imapmail.org:
Attached: source and pdf
On Leopard I see no difference between Venturis ADF and But...
--
Greetings
Pete
Windows, c'est un peu comme le beaujolais nouveau: à chaque nouvelle
cuvée on sait que ce sera dégueulasse, mais on en prend
Hi Peter,
On 01/06/2010, at 8:41 AM, Peter Dyballa wrote:
Am 01.06.2010 um 00:03 schrieb Ross Moore:
Now here's my variant of your example, with all font characters
showing correctly, and constructed where necessary.
Ross,
the correct code points are:
[Ẅ] 1E84 LATIN CAPITAL
Am 01.06.2010 um 01:13 schrieb cfr...@imapmail.org:
On Leopard I see no difference between Venturis ADF and But...
Do you mean that you do not see the incorrect characters in the PDF I
sent you? Or do you mean you do not see them when you process the
source I sent?
My self-compiled
Am 01.06.2010 um 01:06 schrieb Ross Moore:
What I really need now are 2 things:
1. an easy way to access variants for accents, according to
whether they go over upper/lower-case letters;
Linotype FontExplorer X, Apple Fonttools suite, FontForge; access via
glyph IDs.
^ has glyph