I just realized that this could work if you were to manually put the
\dn around all unicode text. This vaguely rings a bell about how
someone solved the CJK problem, but I can't seem to find the mail
right now...something like that CJK was solved by manually putting the
\being{CJK} command in front of everything? I don't remember how this
was resolved but if the developers added something to account for
certain blocks of unicode text (CJK, Devanagari, etc) or even a manual
switch to "turn on" marking of the text as CJK/Devang/etc  we could
probably solve this problem. I would be happy to write out a file for
the Devanag package when I have time.

Also did you ever post your IPA file on linguistlyx? I can take a look
at that and see if I can add any symbols..although honestly I hardly
ever have use for most of those really bizarre ones in there (though
strangely enough I needed a symbol in there once that I couldn't find!
And no, it wasn't the labiodental flap.)

On 4/24/07, Georg Baum <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Stacia Hartleben wrote:

> So the combining character feature wouldn't help with Devanagari?

Yes, I don't think so, since you wrote that several characters need to be
put into the {\dn ...} command.


Georg


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