On 20/07/2010 11:07, Joachim Trinkwitz wrote:
Am 20.07.2010 um 10:19 schrieb François Charette:
I have at home a whole book devoted to Arabic typography and font design which
illustrates how one font can provide Arabic and Latin in which both scripts
share most visual features and blend toge
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 8:29 AM, Ulrike Fischer wrote:
> gloss-english.ldf doesn't use \englishfont. Simply set your fonts
> with fontspec. polyglossia will pick them up for "latin" scripts.
> (Languages are not symmetric regarding fonts: For latin scripts you
> need normally 3 font families (for
Am Tue, 20 Jul 2010 10:19:50 +0200 schrieb François Charette:
>> (Languages are not symmetric regarding fonts: For latin scripts you
>> need normally 3 font families (for \rmfamily, \sffamily, \ttfamily)
>> while greek seems to use only one.)
> There are Greek, Arabic and Hebrew fonts that can
Am 20.07.2010 um 10:19 schrieb François Charette:
> I have at home a whole book devoted to Arabic typography and font design
> which illustrates how one font can provide Arabic and Latin in which both
> scripts share most visual features and blend together in harmony. This may be
> a legitimate
On 20/07/2010 09:29, Ulrike Fischer wrote:
(Languages are not symmetric regarding fonts: For latin scripts you
need normally 3 font families (for \rmfamily, \sffamily, \ttfamily)
while greek seems to use only one.)
There are Greek, Arabic and Hebrew fonts that can be used to match \sffamily a
> (Languages are not symmetric regarding fonts: For latin scripts you
> need normally 3 font families (for \rmfamily, \sffamily, \ttfamily)
> while greek seems to use only one.)
This assumption is not correct. For example, if you do not plan to typeset
say computer code, then obviously you d
Am Tue, 20 Jul 2010 02:55:32 +0100 schrieb George:
> I'm trying to compile a document that has both English and Greek text.
> I tried with polyglossia which uses the correct hyphenation for each
> language but ignores my selection for the English font (and not for
> the Greek for some reason). I t
> \setmainfont[Mapping=tex-text,
> Numbers=OldStyle]
> {Linux Libertine O} % the only font needed
> %\newfontfamily\greekfont{Linux Libertine O}
> %\newfontfamily\englishfont[Numbers=OldStyle]{Linux Libertine O}
And that's exactly what I was writing about the past few
* Gildas Hamel (gwel...@ucsc.edu) wrote:
|> * George (pinkisntw...@gmail.com) wrote:
|>|> I'm trying to compile a document that has both English and Greek
text.
|>|> I tried with polyglossia which uses the correct hyphenation for each
|>|> language but ignores my selection
* George (pinkisntw...@gmail.com) wrote:
|> I'm trying to compile a document that has both English and Greek text.
|> I tried with polyglossia which uses the correct hyphenation for each
|> language but ignores my selection for the English font (and not for
|> the Greek for some reason)
I'm trying to compile a document that has both English and Greek text.
I tried with polyglossia which uses the correct hyphenation for each
language but ignores my selection for the English font (and not for
the Greek for some reason). I try with plain xelatex and it uses the
correct fonts but not
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