Sanjoy Mahajan wrote:
I'll experiment, especially if I can figure out a set of magic
kpathsea paths to keep mkii and mkiv in parallel.
no need for that ; it is made to run in parallel, just an extra zip
with mkiv and lua files ending up in base, and luatools.lua ending
up in the
I'll experiment, especially if I can figure out a set of magic
kpathsea paths to keep mkii and mkiv in parallel.
no need for that ; it is made to run in parallel, just an extra zip
with mkiv and lua files ending up in base, and luatools.lua ending
up in the script path; also, mkiv does not
Hans Hagen schrieb:
hm, will be in the mkiv zip soon (or maybe all mkiv code will be in the
main zip; depends on how many context users want to experiment with the
declared-stable parts of luatex)
I would.
But OpenType fonts also work on Linux Windows.
sure, but one needs this
Sanjoy Mahajan wrote:
Hans Hagen wrote:
depends on how many context users want to experiment with the
declared-stable parts of luatex
I'll experiment, especially if I can figure out a set of magic
kpathsea paths to keep mkii and mkiv in parallel.
no need for that ; it is made
Mojca Miklavec wrote:
On 11/5/06, Hans Hagen wrote:
Philipp Reichmuth wrote:
I've been writing a script that sifts through the unic-xxx.tex files to
get a readable mapping what Unicode characters are supported using
\Amacron-style names.
mtxtools can create such lists
Mojca Miklavec wrote:
The best way out would be if I could enable ConTeXt's UTF-8 regime while
running XeTeX in \XeTeXinputencoding=bytes mode, but I haven't gotten
that to work yet.
That would mean that you loose the whole range of glyphs scripts
outside of the scope which
On 11/5/06, Hans Hagen wrote:
Philipp Reichmuth wrote:
I've been writing a script that sifts through the unic-xxx.tex files to
get a readable mapping what Unicode characters are supported using
\Amacron-style names.
mtxtools can create such lists using the unicode consotium glyph table,
The best way out would be if I could enable ConTeXt's UTF-8 regime while
running XeTeX in \XeTeXinputencoding=bytes mode, but I haven't gotten
that to work yet.
That would mean that you loose the whole range of glyphs scripts
outside of the scope which ConTeXt supports (you would land
Hans Hagen schrieb:
mtxtools can create such lists using the unicode consotium glyph table,
mojca's mapping list and enco/regi files
we use mtxtools to create the tables needed for xetex (used for case
mapping) and luatex (more extensive manipulations)
Sounds interesting. Where do I get
Philipp Reichmuth wrote:
I've been writing a script that sifts through the unic-xxx.tex files to
get a readable mapping what Unicode characters are supported using
\Amacron-style names.
mtxtools can create such lists using the unicode consotium glyph table,
mojca's mapping list and
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