On Sep 20, 2010, at 1:07 PM, Peter Dyballa wrote:
> You're obvious using a TeX Live 2010 binary with the TeX Live 2009 > distribution: > Ahem, are we sure about this? ;-) Comparing my log with Alan’s, I’d say I’ve got TeX Live 2010 binaries *and* distribution: simply, it looks like the TeX Live Manager updated my 2009 distribution "in situ" in the 2009 *directory* (on Windows without even notifying me: on the Mac, the TeX Live Utility told me about distribution/TeX Manager incompatibility, but by reinstalling the TeX Live Manager from it, it proceeded as on Windows): whether this behaviour should be prevented, or vice versa encouraged by making it more obvious, might be the topic for a different discussion (on a different list?). 2010/9/20 Alan Munn <am...@gmx.com> > Putting \relax after the last character in the TIPA string will solve the > problem. > > \textipa{a\relax} > Thank you, Alan, for the quick fix, although this doesn’t explain why this is happening in the first place, and where the "bug" is. After further investigation, fontspec [v2.1] (i.e. *not* xltxtra or xunicode) seems to be the "culprit" here: it could be as simple as a percent sign missing somewhere or be due to some subtle font/encoding interaction. Will or Khaled might want to have a look at this… Many thanks, Paolo
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