Dear Zdenek, what you say is borne out by my tests, where the only font showing a difference between Sanskrit and Hindi is the FreeSerif (the -kti- conjunct).
(I used the Fontspec/Polyglossia system for language-switching.) Best, Dominik On 18 June 2017 at 02:04, Zdenek Wagner <zdenek.wag...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi all, > > as far as I know the Devanagari fonts are either Sanskrit with all > conjuncts that cannot be switched off or Hindi without the Sanskrit > conjuncts. The only exception is FreeSerif which takes the Devanagari block > from the Velthuis Devanagari and models the two modes from the "good old" > Velthuis Devanagari, namely @sanskrit and @modernhindi. It was my > suggestion implemented by Steve White. In all other Devanagari fonts > language switching has no effect because there is nothing to switch, the > language variants are not defined. I do not know how to do it, Steve White > knows. I just specified the desired result and Steve did it. It would be > nice if other font designers learned from his work. > > > Zdeněk Wagner > http://ttsm.icpf.cas.cz/team/wagner.shtml > http://icebearsoft.euweb.cz >
-------------------------------------------------- Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex