On Wed, Apr 30, 2008 at 11:51 AM, Thomas A. Schmitz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Apr 30, 2008, at 11:37 AM, luigi scarso wrote: > > > I'm not searching for the perfect way, just a way to print a greek pdf > > Suggestions welcome. > > Well, the easiest solution is: use a font that does have a full set of > Greek characters. The TeXGyre fonts have some Greek characters, but > they are not really finished and are not usable right now. I need an opentype like helvetica , plus some times and courier; ie \usetypescript[postscript] is ok.
>You're > trying to fake characters which are not in the font; this is > unsatisfying from an esthetical point of view and hackish as for the > produced pdf (not cut-and-paste, no search etc.). yes I know, but actually i need only print, and it's low/mid quality. Very raw, I agree. >If it's > important for you: for several months now, I have been using a version > of my Greek module which works perfectly with mkiv; so far, I haven't > seen the necesity to upload it, but I could do it any time (after some > clean-up). yes, of course. -- luigi it's new . it's powerful . it's luatex . http://www.luatex.org ___________________________________________________________________________________ If your question is of interest to others as well, please add an entry to the Wiki! maillist : ntg-context@ntg.nl / http://www.ntg.nl/mailman/listinfo/ntg-context webpage : http://www.pragma-ade.nl / http://tex.aanhet.net archive : https://foundry.supelec.fr/projects/contextrev/ wiki : http://contextgarden.net ___________________________________________________________________________________