Has anyone used lcm with XeTeX? If so, how do you map greek letters
in the XeTeX source to the encodings used in the lcm font files?
Whoops. That should be cm-lgc, not lcm.
Rodney
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Dear list
Has anyone used lcm with XeTeX? If so, how do you map greek letters
in the XeTeX source to the encodings used in the lcm font files?
I'm writing a program to simulate clouds of trapped atoms. It
involves some complicated equations, and I'm using noweb to combine
the mathematical
Use
http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/fonts/umtypewriter/
that actually contains Greek characters.
a.s.
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Apostolos Syropoulos
Xanthi, Greece
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Am 18.10.2010 um 19:21 schrieb Khaled Hosny:
On Mon, Oct 18, 2010 at 07:00:24PM +0200, Pablo Rodríguez wrote:
Hi Will, Khaled and others,
as Ulrike Fischer has noticed
(http://tug.org/pipermail/xetex/2010-October/018895.html), fontspec
enters in a loop italics are defined as slanted:
On 10/18/2010 07:21 PM, Khaled Hosny wrote:
On Mon, Oct 18, 2010 at 07:00:24PM +0200, Pablo Rodríguez wrote:
[...]
I have no idea how this would be fixed, but github issue tracker[1] is the
proper place to report bug, at least to make sure it get noticed and not
lost in mailing lists.
[1]
Would \savinghyphcodes help? According to the documentation of
e-TeX, setting this parameter to a positive value would save the
\lccodevalues in effect during the execution of \patterns and e-TeX (so also
XeTeX and LuaTeX) would use those frozen values for hyphenation
purposes.
I add the
On 2010-10-19 03:30:24 +1030, Pablo Rodríguez
oi...@web.de said:
as Ulrike Fischer has noticed
(http://tug.org/pipermail/xetex/2010-October/018895.html), fontspec
enters in a loop italics are defined as slanted:
\def\itdefault{sl}
This problem, funnily enough, has existed pretty