On Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 12:09:40PM -0300, Matthias Reischenbacher wrote: > Hi Simon, > > What is kind of strange although, when using some other font, which > also contains this character (e.g. Arial, Calibri, Times New Roman > etc. [1]), the character gets displayed in a weird way (have a look > at the attached screenshot). > > I'd prefer to use Arial because it's a Windows standard font, but if > that's not possible I'm happy with the current solution too. Which > part of the FOP code is responsible for drawing this character in > PDF output? > > [1] http://www.fileformat.info/info/unicode/char/200d/fontsupport.htm
Interesting site. When you click on the link 'Local fonts', you see that some fonts have this glyph for the zero-width joiner. I guess those fonts focus more on insight in the character string than on rendering texts. Simon -- Simon Pepping home page: http://www.leverkruid.eu --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: fop-users-unsubscr...@xmlgraphics.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: fop-users-h...@xmlgraphics.apache.org