On Fri, 13 Sep 2013 02:41:33 +0200
Hans Hagen pra...@wxs.nl wrote:
On 9/12/2013 10:05 PM, john Culleton wrote:
Using mkiv to what degree can one depend on the encoding of a font
to be in texnansi form?
1. typescript fonts?
2. otf fonts?
3. type 1 fonts?
4. ttf fonts?
5.
Am 14.09.2013 um 15:34 schrieb john Culleton j...@wexfordpress.com:
Excellent! Now in MKIV how would I encode an opening quote mark American
style? In previous TeX programs it was always ``. The MKIV substitute
\quotation{foo}
is not practical for my application, where the raw input code
On Sat, 14 Sep 2013 17:42:42 +0200
Wolfgang Schuster schuster.wolfg...@gmail.com wrote:
Am 14.09.2013 um 15:34 schrieb john Culleton j...@wexfordpress.com:
Excellent! Now in MKIV how would I encode an opening quote mark
American style? In previous TeX programs it was always ``. The MKIV
Am 14.09.2013 um 19:16 schrieb john Culleton j...@wexfordpress.com:
On Sat, 14 Sep 2013 17:42:42 +0200
Wolfgang Schuster schuster.wolfg...@gmail.com wrote:
Am 14.09.2013 um 15:34 schrieb john Culleton j...@wexfordpress.com:
Excellent! Now in MKIV how would I encode an opening quote
On 9/12/2013 10:05 PM, john Culleton wrote:
Using mkiv to what degree can one depend on the encoding of a font to
be in texnansi form?
1. typescript fonts?
2. otf fonts?
3. type 1 fonts?
4. ttf fonts?
5. No guarantees?
And does it make a difference if one uses \simplefonts versus