--- Martin Sevior <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > On Thu, 25 Apr 2002, arvind kidambi wrote: > > > > > Hi All, > > > > I am a grad student.My prof has developed a tool > called "vedapad" > > which is for typing indian devanagari script.I > have incorporated it > > with Abiword.Now indian devanagari script can be > easily typed in > > abiword.right now it is for windows platform.we > are working to make it > > cross platform.i encounted one problem in > abiword.if the style is > > heading 1 then the characters appear coorectly but > in normal style the > > characters do not.Any suggestions on how to solve > this? > > > > regards, > > > > Hi Avrind, > This is very cool and extremely topical! One > guess I have is > that the font "Times New Roman" used for normal > style does not have the > required devanagari glyphs whereas "Arial" used in > Heading 1 style does.
This could be. Since he's on Windows, I know that Windows "fakes" Devanagari fonts to match whichever font you have selected, when the selected font does not have Devanagari glyphs. Abi may possibly be making assumptions based on Times/Arial instead of checking what it's actually getting from the font system. This is a feature of Uniscribe and it's supposed to be transparent to make Devanagari "just work". Andrew Dunbar. > To check just select the font "Arial" and see if > your text is entered then > try "Times New Roman" and the other fonts we have. > > We're very interested in your project as we are > right now discussing how > best to deal with complex scripts from South Asia. > > Cheers > > Martin > > ===== http://linguaphile.sourceforge.net http://www.abisource.com __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Everything you'll ever need on one web page from News and Sport to Email and Music Charts http://uk.my.yahoo.com
