Hello,
if I type [chinese] the output is [chinesespace]. (Example
attached.)
I addition I observed that chinese; will have a line break like
chinesenew line; which looks quite ugly.
(The ; and [] are half-width Characters, i.e. the normal Latin
characters and not those which are as wide
.
Concrete Math).
Now I have to solve the last (I hope so) problem: The Czech encoding. I
have all my input files in ISO Latin 2 encoding. It was no problem up to
now because I used fonts with IL2 encoding. What shoud I do now the new
LM fonts?
(BTW, is it all right that I have to include
Mojca Miklavec wrote:
There are two things: input encoding or regime (\enableregime[utf] inyour case) and font
Many thanks, \enableregime did what I needed.
But I still have some minor questions:
1) Where should I put \loadmapfile[psclean.map]? (I can't include it in
pdftex.cnf, since
Michal Kvasnička wrote:
Mojca Miklavec wrote:
There are two things: input encoding or regime (\enableregime[utf]
inyour case) and font
Many thanks, \enableregime did what I needed.
But I still have some minor questions:
1) Where should I put \loadmapfile[psclean.map]? (I can't include it
Idris Samawi Hamid wrote:
Who is the official author of the Latin Modern family of typefaces? What is
the best way to place this in a colophon? Here is what I have now:
From the Notice line in the AFM files:
Copyright 2003--2005 TeX USERS GROUPS. Supported by DANTE eV, GUST,
GUTenberg
metrics from distro or also remove the typescripts
related to this encoding?
I think the first is OK. But it would be nice to be able to use csr font
in ConTeXt if user get font from e.g. CTAN. Latin Modern was improved
from winter when I had some comments to accent's position/shape and I
use
is OK. But it would be nice to be able to use csr
font in ConTeXt if user get font from e.g. CTAN. Latin Modern was
improved from winter when I had some comments to accent's
position/shape and I use them but still there are some national
typography differencies that preserves csr alive. Hopefully
that latin modern is used there
(i.e. drop vnr)?
Hans
-
Hans Hagen | PRAGMA ADE
Ridderstraat 27 | 8061 GH Hasselt | The Netherlands
tel: 038 477 53 69 | fax: 038 477 53 74
Thursday, July 7, 2005 Adam Lindsay wrote:
Me neither, but they look to be of good quality, but of lesser glyph
coverage (lacking AMS symbols) than the PX fonts. That said, the basic
three fonts are 99.8% glyph compatible with the existing PX support.
So ConTeXt uses the PX family for math
Giuseppe Bilotta said this at Fri, 8 Jul 2005 10:11:01 +0200:
Thursday, July 7, 2005 Adam Lindsay wrote:
Me neither, but they look to be of good quality, but of lesser glyph
coverage (lacking AMS symbols) than the PX fonts. That said, the basic
three fonts are 99.8% glyph compatible with the
Friday, July 8, 2005 Adam Lindsay wrote:
Giuseppe Bilotta said this at Fri, 8 Jul 2005 10:11:01 +0200:
Thursday, July 7, 2005 Adam Lindsay wrote:
Me neither, but they look to be of good quality, but of lesser glyph
coverage (lacking AMS symbols) than the PX fonts. That said, the basic
three
Giuseppe Bilotta wrote:
Is it possible to set mathpazo as the default math font for
Palatino, and setting px as the fallback?
that would break many of my files
the best thing to do is (given that this pazzo stuff is complete)
\starttypescript[pazzo][...
.
\stoptypescript
For that
Giuseppe Bilotta said this at Fri, 8 Jul 2005 13:39:22 +0200:
Is it possible to set mathpazo as the default math font for
Palatino, and setting px as the fallback?
Interesting.
My first thought (and this probably can apply to your other issue within
this thread) was to probe for tfm files with
Adam Lindsay wrote:
My first thought (and this probably can apply to your other issue within
this thread) was to probe for tfm files with something like:
\doiffile{zplmr7t.tfm}
...but that doesn't work. Does anyone know how you can look for non-.tex
files from within ConTeXt?
you probably
Hans Hagen said this at Fri, 8 Jul 2005 15:14:29 +0200:
...but that doesn't work. Does anyone know how you can look for non-.tex
files from within ConTeXt?
you probably need to add the font paths you your tex input paths
Hmm. That doesn't make for a satisfying general solution, then.
--
Or you could do something like this:
\def\doiffontelse#1#2#3{%
\batchmode \font\klutch=#1 \errorstopmode
\ifdim \the\fontdimen5\klutch 1pt #3\else #2\fi
\let\klutch\relax
}
\doiffontelse{ec-lmr10}
{\message{Up-to-date}}
{\message{Please install lmr}}
It gives an ugly
Taco Hoekwater wrote:
Or you could do something like this:
\def\doiffontelse#1#2#3{%
\batchmode \font\klutch=#1 \errorstopmode
\ifdim \the\fontdimen5\klutch 1pt #3\else #2\fi
\let\klutch\relax
}
\doiffontelse{ec-lmr10}
{\message{Up-to-date}}
{\message{Please install lmr}}
Wednesday, July 6, 2005 Hans Hagen wrote:
Giuseppe Bilotta wrote:
The fallback being a fallback, it should be something that
everybody has for sure. So it should stay cmr12. This, at
least, is MNHO.
Is there a way to set the fall-back font? (In cont-usr or
something)
actually, lmr will
Giuseppe Bilotta wrote:
Yes, but my point is that I *don't* use cmr (at least not in
this document), so I see no reason why ConTeXt shoud load
lmr :)
as taco explained in a previous mail, we *do* need a fall back font, just in
case somewhere later in the process
of course we can start
Hans Hagen said this at Thu, 7 Jul 2005 15:39:23 +0200:
BTW, does ConTeXt support the pazo family of fonts?
never tried them ... question for adam -)
Me neither, but they look to be of good quality, but of lesser glyph
coverage (lacking AMS symbols) than the PX fonts. That said, the basic
I just upgraded my MiKTeX and ConTeXt, and I found out that
ConTeXt tries to load Latin Modern regardless of my choice.
Example document:
\setupbodyfont[ppl,rm,12pt]%
\starttext
Hello, world!
\stoptext
Discarding my \setupbodyfont, ConTeXt tries to load
ec-lmr12.
Suggestions?
--
Giuseppe
Giuseppe Bilotta said this at Wed, 6 Jul 2005 14:02:10 +0200:
\setupbodyfont[ppl,rm,12pt]%
ppl is defined in type-pre, which is apparently deprecated in the latest
ConTeXt.
--
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Adam T. Lindsay, Computing Dept. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Adam Lindsay wrote:
Giuseppe Bilotta said this at Wed, 6 Jul 2005 14:02:10 +0200:
\setupbodyfont[ppl,rm,12pt]%
ppl is defined in type-pre, which is apparently deprecated in the latest
ConTeXt.
\usetypescript[palatino][ec]
\setupbodyfont[palatino,rm,12pt]
instead
Hans
ps. the ppl was a
Wednesday, July 6, 2005 Hans Hagen wrote:
Adam Lindsay wrote:
Giuseppe Bilotta said this at Wed, 6 Jul 2005 14:02:10 +0200:
\setupbodyfont[ppl,rm,12pt]%
ppl is defined in type-pre, which is apparently deprecated in the latest
ConTeXt.
\usetypescript[palatino][ec]
Giuseppe Bilotta wrote:
ConTeXt still tries to load lmr12, though:
This is pdfeTeX, Version 3.141592-1.21a-2.2 (MiKTeX 2.4) (preloaded
format=cont-en 2005.7.6) 6 JUL 2005 15:47
entering extended mode
**tesi.tex
(tesi.tex
I N B O C C A A L L U P O !!!
luigi
On 6 juil. 2005, at 15:48, Giuseppe Bilotta wrote:
\usetypescript[palatino][ec]
\setupbodyfont[palatino,rm,12pt]
Can you try the following:
\usetypescript [adobekb] [ec]
\loadmapfile [context-base]
\usetypescript[palatino][\defaultencoding]
\setupbodyfont[palatino,12pt]
\starttext
Giuseppe Bilotta wrote:
Wednesday, July 6, 2005 Hans Hagen wrote:
Adam Lindsay wrote:
Giuseppe Bilotta said this at Wed, 6 Jul 2005 14:02:10 +0200:
\setupbodyfont[ppl,rm,12pt]%
ppl is defined in type-pre, which is apparently deprecated in the latest
ConTeXt.
i've added a slightly
Wednesday, July 6, 2005 luigi.scarso wrote:
Giuseppe Bilotta wrote:
ConTeXt still tries to load lmr12, though:
This is pdfeTeX, Version 3.141592-1.21a-2.2 (MiKTeX
2.4) (preloaded format=cont-en 2005.7.6) 6 JUL 2005 15:47
entering extended mode
**tesi.tex
(tesi.tex
I N B O C C A A L
Wednesday, July 6, 2005 Hans Hagen wrote:
this is weird, esp since this is pretty old untouched stuff
I'll bet it's because lm is the new default font, so
regardless of what I try to load it still tries to get that,
first thing.
--
Giuseppe Oblomov Bilotta
Giuseppe Bilotta wrote:
Wednesday, July 6, 2005 luigi.scarso wrote:
Giuseppe Bilotta wrote:
ConTeXt still tries to load lmr12, though:
This is pdfeTeX, Version 3.141592-1.21a-2.2 (MiKTeX
2.4) (preloaded format=cont-en 2005.7.6) 6 JUL 2005 15:47
entering extended mode
**tesi.tex
Giuseppe Bilotta wrote:
! Font \*12ptrmtf*=ec-lmr12 not loadable: Metric (TFM) file not found.
maybe its a fall back font that is loaded here; in any case, you need to have
latin modern on your machine (well, you want that any way in order to hyphenate
italian -)
Hans
, answer sto questions like
Why does ConTeXt try to load Latin Moder will be more rapid.
luigi
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luigi.scarso wrote:
When someone tells you in bocca al lupo to wish you good luck, you
are supposed to reply crepi (maybe you can use the extended sentence
as well, i. e. crepi il lupo).
Thanks for the explanation!
To Giuseppe: In bocca al lupo! :)
Taco
, with some efforts.
I hope that when modules.pdf will be ok, answer sto questions like
Why does ConTeXt try to load Latin Moder will be more rapid.
-)
Hans
-
Hans Hagen | PRAGMA ADE
Wednesday, July 6, 2005 Hans Hagen wrote:
! Font \*12ptrmtf*=ec-lmr12 not loadable: Metric (TFM) file not found.
maybe its a fall back font that is loaded here; in any case, you need to have
latin modern on your machine (well, you want that any way in order to
hyphenate
italian
Giuseppe Bilotta wrote:
Wednesday, July 6, 2005 Hans Hagen wrote:
! Font \*12ptrmtf*=ec-lmr12 not loadable: Metric (TFM) file not found.
maybe its a fall back font that is loaded here; in any case, you need to have
latin modern on your machine (well, you want that any way in order
Wednesday, July 6, 2005 Giuseppe Bilotta wrote:
I just upgraded my MiKTeX and ConTeXt, and I found out that
ConTeXt tries to load Latin Modern regardless of my choice.
Example document:
\setupbodyfont[ppl,rm,12pt]%
\starttext
Hello, world!
\stoptext
Discarding my \setupbodyfont
Wednesday, July 6, 2005 Otared Kavian wrote:
\usetypescript [adobekb] [ec]
Thank you very much. This, combined with the suppression of
\preloadfonts, fixed all of my problems.
--
Giuseppe Oblomov Bilotta
___
ntg-context mailing list
Hi,
By no reason I should *need* Latin Modern. I want to use Palatino,
not Latin Modern. If ConTeXt can't find a font, it should
complain about *that* font missing.
Context behaves precisely like before: it loads the fallback family at
\everyjob. It absolutely has to, because otherwise plain
Wednesday, July 6, 2005 Taco Hoekwater wrote:
By no reason I should *need* Latin Modern. I want to use Palatino,
not Latin Modern. If ConTeXt can't find a font, it should
complain about *that* font missing.
Context behaves precisely like before: it loads the fallback family at
\everyjob
Giuseppe Bilotta wrote:
The fallback being a fallback, it should be something that
everybody has for sure. So it should stay cmr12. This, at
least, is MNHO.
Is there a way to set the fall-back font? (In cont-usr or
something)
actually, lmr will be in all distributions, if it isn't already;
Vit Zyka wrote:
But I get error: !Math formula deleted: Insufficient symbol fonts.
Where is the problem?
it means that your font is not a proper math font, taco may know how to deal
with this
? - \starttypescript [*] [fallback] is generaly useful. Is a good idea
replaced by a (faster) setup)
to
Vit Zyka wrote:
Adam Lindsay wrote:
Vit Zyka said this at Wed, 9 Feb 2005 22:34:13 +0100:
The question is how to elegantly switch from standard (st2) tfm to
extended (st3) tfm when the glyph is not present in st2 - with
preserving \rm, \bf, \it, \bi.
basically, you declare a variant set for a
Vit Zyka said this at Tue, 15 Mar 2005 19:23:05 +0100:
enco-st1.tex - ec encoding with storm glyph extension
enco-st2.tex - xl2 encoding with storm glyph extension
enco-st3.tex - variants (additional glyph) for enco-st1 and enco-st2
Vit,
I would refer you to this thread with Thomas
Hans Hagen wrote:
Vit Zyka wrote:
) I feel stronger and stronger that csr should coexist with lm for
future. Perhaps like a option (not present in minimal distr?), but
with full functionality if extra loaded.
about how many to be czechified chars are we talking?
About 33 Czech glyphs (+5 or 7
Hans Hagen wrote:
Adam Lindsay wrote:
Vit Zyka said this at Thu, 10 Feb 2005 00:33:59 +0100:
But ... seeing Andulka, some support has already exists there, has
not it? I would not like to discover wheel ;-)
no, it's just a trick of the light. I picked that font name just as a
dummy example to
Vit Zyka wrote:
) I feel stronger and stronger that csr should coexist with lm for
future. Perhaps like a option (not present in minimal distr?), but with
full functionality if extra loaded.
about how many to be czechified chars are we talking?
So I would like il2 will be preserved as it is and
Adam Lindsay wrote:
Vit Zyka said this at Thu, 10 Feb 2005 00:33:59 +0100:
But ... seeing Andulka, some support has already exists
there, has not it? I would not like to discover wheel ;-)
no, it's just a trick of the light.
I picked that font name just as a dummy example to get your
Adam Lindsay wrote:
latin modern fonts instead of cmr/plr/csr/aer/vnr:
Ah, here's a conflict: XeTeX doesn't have latin modern yet. (Needs to be
converted to OpenType, with some special table enabled... JK hasn't
documented it yet.) Do you have a switch to avoid the cmr-lm conversion?
what cmr
Hans Hagen said this at Tue, 8 Feb 2005 22:51:24 +0100:
what cmr does xetex use? a special version? we can of course make a xetex
specific typescript to setup the default fonts
It's a straight opentype encapsulation of the CMR type1 fonts from CTAN,
as far as I can tell.
Getting LM in there
and this was one of the objectives of
the latin modern fonts.
3) ring is lifeless/faint
indeed, let's see what Jacko thinks of it
4) acute is OK; I would prefer vertical position somewhere inbetween LM
an CS, but CS are consistent with tight accents (acute and caron)
this is a disputed area, afaik latin
I wonder,
\definecharacter Aring {\ilencodedrA}
\definecharacter Lstroke {\ilencodedL}
\definecharacter lstroke {\ilencodedl}
where do these come from? is that because csr does not provide those glyphs?
(which makes il2 like aer (almoet ec) something almost il2 -)
Hans
and to Jacko.
1) LM has very ugly caron
2) caron is too high at both capitals and minuscules
Isn't that a matter of taste? Think of mixed language usage (not that
strange in todays europe), then one wants consistency and this was one
of the objectives of the latin modern fonts.
3) ring is lifeless/faint
Hans Hagen wrote:
I wonder,
\definecharacter Aring {\ilencodedrA}
\definecharacter Lstroke {\ilencodedL}
\definecharacter lstroke {\ilencodedl}
where do these come from? is that because csr does not provide those
glyphs?
il2 encoding is not ISO-8859-2 but encoding of CS fonts
qx encoding;
if il2 is only used for csr, then we can best extend il2 encoding since all the
chars missing in csr are present in latin modern;
Hans
-
Hans Hagen | PRAGMA ADE
Vit Zyka said this at Wed, 9 Feb 2005 22:34:13 +0100:
The question is how to elegantly switch from standard (st2) tfm to
extended (st3) tfm when the glyph is not present in st2 - with
preserving \rm, \bf, \it, \bi.
Example: {\bf Bold text with special char \textplus} where \texplus is
bold
Adam Lindsay wrote:
Vit Zyka said this at Wed, 9 Feb 2005 22:34:13 +0100:
The question is how to elegantly switch from standard (st2) tfm to
extended (st3) tfm when the glyph is not present in st2 - with
preserving \rm, \bf, \it, \bi.
Example: {\bf Bold text with special char \textplus} where
Vit Zyka said this at Thu, 10 Feb 2005 00:33:59 +0100:
But ... seeing Andulka, some support has already exists
there, has not it? I would not like to discover wheel ;-)
no, it's just a trick of the light.
I picked that font name just as a dummy example to get your attention. :)
I can't afford
between
\en and \cz):
\unprotected \setuplanguage
[cz]
[compoundhyphen=-,
leftcompoundhyphen=-,
rightcompoundhyphen=-]
that;s because in your version the keywords are not known
=
- latin modern fonts instead of cmr/plr/csr
Hans Hagen wrote:
Vit Zyka wrote:
I save time to install new release and start to test. Good news:
1) The hyphen code can be processed with cont-cz.
Bad news:
1) \c!compoundhyphen atc. are not defined in cont-con.tex
they are in mult-con (in the alpha)
Sorry Hans, I did not distinguish between
Idris Samawi Hamid said this at Mon, 7 Feb 2005 08:28:43 -0700:
No, but I use old-style numerals as default
Ok, the next alpha will offer you:
\starttext
\usetypescript [modern][\defaultencoding]
\usetypescript [map] [latin-modern-os] [\defaultencoding]
\setupbodyfont[modern] test 1234 test
\setupencoding[default=il2] \usetypescript[modern][\defaultencoding]
There is some mess with encoding, I think:
-
\setupencoding[default=il2]
\def\criticalchars{\dcaron=\v d=}
\starttext
\usetypescript[modern][\defaultencoding]
\criticalchars
\stoptext
Vit Zyka said this at Tue, 8 Feb 2005 12:30:20 +0100:
So problem is at the very beginning stage. I check if input file is
exactly in il2 encoding, yes it is. 'ì' has catcode letter. So a the
letter is should enter the font.
Where is problem?
I think it's with two things:
1) you're not using
Hans Hagen said this at Thu, 3 Feb 2005 18:11:29 +0100:
latin modern fonts instead of cmr/plr/csr/aer/vnr:
Ah, here's a conflict: XeTeX doesn't have latin modern yet. (Needs to be
converted to OpenType, with some special table enabled... JK hasn't
documented it yet.) Do you have a switch
Adam Lindsay wrote:
Vit Zyka said this at Tue, 8 Feb 2005 12:30:20 +0100:
So problem is at the very beginning stage. I check if input file is
exactly in il2 encoding, yes it is. 'ì' has catcode letter. So a the
letter is should enter the font.
Where is problem?
I think it's with two things:
Vit Zyka wrote:
\setupencoding[default=il2] \usetypescript[modern][\defaultencoding]
There is some mess with encoding, I think:
-
\setupencoding[default=il2]
\def\criticalchars{\dcaron=\v d=}
\starttext
\usetypescript[modern][\defaultencoding]
\criticalchars
\stoptext
Adam Lindsay wrote:
Ah, here's a conflict: XeTeX doesn't have latin modern yet. (Needs to be
converted to OpenType, with some special table enabled... JK hasn't
documented it yet.) Do you have a switch to avoid the cmr-lm conversion?
hm, we should have a \beginXETEX ... \endXETEX section
Hans Hagen wrote:
btw, if you patch enco-il2 by
\startcoding[il2][il2] % second entry
and regenerate the format you have a regime for free -)
OK. That is the game. Chars were born.
I prepared a quick comparision of Czech/Slovak accented letters (Latin
Modern v. CS Fonts). See http
Vit Zyka wrote:
Hans Hagen wrote:
btw, if you patch enco-il2 by
\startcoding[il2][il2] % second entry
and regenerate the format you have a regime for free -)
OK. That is the game. Chars were born.
I prepared a quick comparision of Czech/Slovak accented letters (Latin
Modern v. CS Fonts). See
Vit Zyka wrote:
I prefer the second variant. Can we find its solution?
added to the previous mail: german has dedicated umlauts in latin modern, so
what you ask for is dedidated (positioned lower) caron's and such; about the
small circular thingie, it indeed looks a bit to spiny in latin modern
Hans Hagen said this at Tue, 8 Feb 2005 13:41:26 +0100:
Also, something I just realised (thanks to Vit's example): XeTeX hasn't a
clue when it comes to grid typesetting. (Has to do with the difficulty of
getting the metrics from the platform fonts, I think.)
context does grid typesetting
Sorry 4 late response, was out of town...
On Fri, 04 Feb 2005 10:11:40 +0100, Hans Hagen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Are there things in cmr that are not in latin modern?
No, but I use old-style numerals as default (as it should be in much of
the liberal arts and
critical scholarship
Idris Samawi Hamid wrote:
Sorry 4 late response, was out of town...
On Fri, 04 Feb 2005 10:11:40 +0100, Hans Hagen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Are there things in cmr that are not in latin modern?
No, but I use old-style numerals as default (as it should be in much of
the liberal arts and
critical
On Mon, 7 Feb 2005 15:45:29 +, Adam Lindsay [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Idris Samawi Hamid said this at Mon, 7 Feb 2005 08:28:43 -0700:
No, but I use old-style numerals as default
Out of curiosity, are the old-style numerals from CM (cmmi*, I presume)
in any shapes other than roman? I had the
On Mon, 07 Feb 2005 16:41:30 +0100, Hans Hagen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
There are also a few accents that I have to make on the fly with
(amateurish) macros, including the shorter bar over lower case i and
some others. lm should provide all of this by default.
do you have a list of them:
name
=-,
rightcompoundhyphen=-]
\starttext
\en \dorecurse{100}{test||}test \endgraf
\cz \dorecurse{100}{test||}test \endgraf
\stoptext
=
- latin modern fonts instead of cmr/plr/csr/aer/vnr:
fetch the cont-lmt.zip file if needed
I want to compare
Hi,
I posted an alpha release. Main differences:
- some efficiency changes in language parts
needed for || extension
- latin modern fonts instead of cmr/plr/csr/aer/vnr:
fetch the cont-lmt.zip file if needed
- david antos' wish, test for this:
\unprotected \setuplanguage
[cz]
[\c
On Thu, 03 Feb 2005 18:11:29 +0100, Hans Hagen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I posted an alpha release. Main differences:
snip
- latin modern fonts instead of cmr/plr/csr/aer/vnr:
fetch the cont-lmt.zip file if needed
Ok, but lm is (as far as I know) still not quite usable for e.g. my
journal
At 16:06 20/01/2004, you wrote:
Hello,
if I understand Latin Modern correctly, it contains the \Psi both as
upright and as italic version (CM has only the upright version).
How can I get the italic version?
It did not work this way:
\usetypescript[modern][texnansi]
\setupbodyfont[modern,12pt
Hello,
On Wed, Jan 21, 2004 at 02:07:57PM +0100, Hans Hagen wrote:
you need to 'patch' the math-* files where the symbols are defined;
an option can be to provide an additional set of definitions; i can also
think of something
\Var\Psi
what do the other mathematicians think
In principle,
the latin modern fonts. This example works with winxp and miktex:
Thanks for this hint. But as I read in newsgroup d.c.t.t aren't there still
bugs with the kerning etc?
Strange: I don't have Latin Modern installed, but your example file
compiled here with texexec without any error nor warning message
hyphenated, but not évolution... :(
take the latin modern fonts. This example works with winxp and miktex:
Thanks for this hint. But as I read in newsgroup d.c.t.t aren't there still
bugs with the kerning etc?
Strange: I don't have Latin Modern installed, but your example file
Hello Peter,
Peter Münster schrieb:
Here again the example, where you can see the problem.
Here's no problem - I get hyphenation.
Ok, then there must be a problem with my installation. I only get evolution
hyphenated, but not évolution... :(
Cheers, Peter
take the latin modern fonts
Hello Jean-Pierre,
What should I do for using this font under Context ?
Do I need to write typescript files or is it possible
to use it in a very simple manner ?
see
http://www.tex.ac.uk/cgi-bin/texfaq2html?label=uselmfonts
for general installation intstruction.
You should use a recent
Hans Hagen writes:
since this effect does not show op with cmtt, it looks like the lmtt
fonts
indeed have a ligature, which makes them somehow incompatible;
Note that the bug also occurs with ae-fonts, so they should be fixed
too... although ae-fonts will probably disappear when lm-fonts
Hi,
Daniel Flipo [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
[...]
\starttyping ... \stoptyping works fine, but
\type{} typsets a single dash instead of two dashes.
The single dash is also different (lower and shorter)
than the two dashes.
You should make a bug report and send it to Hans. IMO the \type
Hans Hagen [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Hi,
since this effect does not show op with cmtt, it looks like the lmtt
fonts indeed have a ligature, which makes them somehow incompatible;
right. See for example cork-lmtt10.tfm
(LIGTABLE
(LABEL O 41)1
(LIG O 140 O 275)
(STOP)
Dear Hans,
thank you very much. It works perfekt.
Best wishes,
Helmut
At 22:54 10/08/2003 +0200, you wrote:
Hello,
what is to do if I want to use the Latin Modern Fonts with context? Today
I
have installed the LM package (0.86 of 04.08.2003) of the Latin Modern
family of fonts
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