Hans Hagen wrote:
Pablo Rodríguez wrote:
After using \showfontstrip to get fonts with the same x-height by
calculating the rscale factor, I guess it would be very useful (at least
for me) to have an option that calculates relative scaling automatically
to match both x-heights.
I think it
Pablo Rodríguez wrote:
Hans Hagen wrote:
Pablo Rodríguez wrote:
After using \showfontstrip to get fonts with the same x-height by
calculating the rscale factor, I guess it would be very useful (at least
for me) to have an option that calculates relative scaling automatically
to
Pablo Rodríguez wrote:
Hans Hagen wrote:
does this mean that when
\XeTeXuseglyphmetrics=0 (default)
xetex will mess around with the interlinespace? that would be a bad default
behaviour
In XeTeX (and XeLaTeX) the default value is one.
I guess XeConTeXt should have
Pablo Rodríguez wrote:
After using \showfontstrip to get fonts with the same x-height by
calculating the rscale factor, I guess it would be very useful (at least
for me) to have an option that calculates relative scaling automatically
to match both x-heights.
I think it would be a useful
Hans Hagen wrote:
� wrote:
Hi there,
Using XeTeX, one of the features that I miss at most from XeLaTeX
(from fontspec), is the possibility to set automatically the scaling of
fonts so that they match the lowercase or uppercase letters of the roman
font. I wonder whether there is something
� wrote:
Hi there,
I'm using XeTeX one of the features that I miss at most from XeLaTeX
(from fontspec), is the possibility to set automatically the scaling of
fonts so that they match the lowercase or uppercase letters of the roman
font. I wonder whether there is something similar for
Hans Hagen wrote:
does this mean that when
\XeTeXuseglyphmetrics=0 (default)
xetex will mess around with the interlinespace? that would be a bad default
behaviour
In XeTeX (and XeLaTeX) the default value is one.
I guess XeConTeXt should have \XeTeXuseglyphmetrics=1 by default.
Pablo
Am 2006-11-12 um 22:17 schrieb Pablo Rodríguez:
I'm using XeTeX one of the features that I miss at most from XeLaTeX
(from fontspec), is the possibility to set automatically the
scaling of
fonts so that they match the lowercase or uppercase letters of the
roman
font. I wonder whether
Henning Hraban Ramm wrote:
Am 2006-11-12 um 22:17 schrieb Pablo Rodríguez:
I'm using XeTeX one of the features that I miss at most from XeLaTeX
(from fontspec), is the possibility to set automatically the
scaling of
fonts so that they match the lowercase or uppercase letters of the