Alan,
I know next to nothing about math, but I know that the Greek
typescripts do not define a math font. So you will get errors doing
math when the body font is Greek. I wish I could help, but defining a
math font is beyond my abilities. If anyone is interested in doing
it, however, I will be happy to provide the specs for the Greek fonts.
Best
Thomas
On Oct 31, 2005, at 2:36 PM, Alan Bowen wrote:
Giuseppe,
Many thanks for your help: it is very much appreciated.
\overbar{{\grk{kj}}} \grk{Kull'hnhc d\high{\tfx{ou}} med'eonta ka`i
Arkad'ihc polum'hlou}
works, but it really is more a work-around than a good solution.
Ideally, one would like to be able to do math when the body font is
Greek. But we both need some font wizards to help with this.
All best, Alan
On Oct 31, 2005, at 8:06 AM, Giuseppe Bilotta wrote:
Monday, October 31, 2005 Alan Bowen wrote:
I removed some of the \grk. ( I had inserted them because I was
uncertain of the effect entering math mode would have on my body
font
choice. In Plain TeX, I think it was necessary to specify the font.)
\grk{\overline{kj}} still fails because of insufficient symbol fonts
(just as \grk{\overbar{kj}}).
Shouldn't these be \overline{\grk{kj}}?
Anyway, I'm afraid I can't help you any further :(
--
Giuseppe Oblomov Bilotta
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