In article <aanlkti=gcb=m0snal8w=uc=nyxzzfj225hvghhvkh...@mail.gmail.com>, Ed <ed.tra...@gmail.com> writes:
> I think what I would like to do, ideally, is create a "pure" version > of the font that uses only proper OpenType features. Then after that, > I could add certain "corruptions" like negative left bearings. But as > it currently stands, I don't even know what to use to test the "pure" > version of such a font ... Perhpas you can use the program "otfview" included in, for instance, "libotf-bin" package of Ubuntu. You can also build it from the source; the release candidate version 0.9.12RC is available at: <http://www.m17n.org/libotf/libotf-0.9.12RC.tar.gz> With that program, you select cmap (perhaps 3-1 (unicode)), enter character sequences, and specify which features to apply on it. By the way, it seems that Tai Tham is encoded in logical order (unlike Thai). Then, a shaping engine have to reorder glyphs before applying GSUB/GPOS features. And as "otfview" doesn't reorder glyphs, you must enter a character sequence in the same order as what a shaping engine will do. --- Kenichi Handa ha...@m17n.org _______________________________________________ HarfBuzz mailing list HarfBuzz@lists.freedesktop.org http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/harfbuzz