Re: step-by-step instructions how to print Chinese in PDF?
Argyn Kuketayev wrote: Now I have another issue: unless I put full file path of font description xml (like "c:/temp/msmincho.xml"), FOP cannot find it. I thought that baseDir in userconfig.xml must set the folder to search for fonts, but it doesn't. What's the directory for FOP to search for files? There is none. This is a known deficiency. The baseDir is used for the config files itself and for resolving relative URIs, as they occur in external-graphics. J.Pietschmann
RE: step-by-step instructions how to print Chinese in PDF?
Thank you, guys! Now it works. The problem was stupid and simple: mismatch in font names, file names and templates. Now I have another issue: unless I put full file path of font description xml (like "c:/temp/msmincho.xml"), FOP cannot find it. I thought that baseDir in userconfig.xml must set the folder to search for fonts, but it doesn't. What's the directory for FOP to search for files? Argyn -Original Message- From: Peter B. West [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, May 10, 2002 7:50 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: step-by-step instructions how to print Chinese in PDF? Argyn, This is a stab in the dark, but I am surprised to see "Arial" associated with an ideographic font. If the font information tells you that Arial is present, then what I suspect is that the font bundles Arial with its ideographic font(s) so that the users have the resources to process both Western and ideographic text. The other suspicious note in this is the use of serif and sans-serif. These terms have a very specific meaning in Western fonts, but I cannot see any application for them in an ideographic font. Bottom line is that when you specify "Arial" or "sans-serif" you are specifying a non-ideographic font, so it is not surprising that you are not seeing any ideographic characters. What other font-names are available to you in msmincho.ttc? Mincho? If so, try that in your userconfig, and forget the "family" until you find out what a meaningful "family" value would be for an ideographic font. Peter Argyn Kuketayev wrote: >I'm using Cocoon 2.0.1. > >here's what I put inside my userconfig.xml > > > > > > > > > >I generated msminch.xml file with TTFReader utility from msmincho.ttc file. >I tried an option with file-embed too. > >My PDF file doesn't show me chinese letters, it puts "#" instead. > >I know that my XML-FO file is Ok. All fonts are on my PC, so I can see >Chinese in Internet Explorer. > >What shall I look into to find my problem? > > >
Re: step-by-step instructions how to print Chinese in PDF?
Argyn, This is a stab in the dark, but I am surprised to see "Arial" associated with an ideographic font. If the font information tells you that Arial is present, then what I suspect is that the font bundles Arial with its ideographic font(s) so that the users have the resources to process both Western and ideographic text. The other suspicious note in this is the use of serif and sans-serif. These terms have a very specific meaning in Western fonts, but I cannot see any application for them in an ideographic font. Bottom line is that when you specify "Arial" or "sans-serif" you are specifying a non-ideographic font, so it is not surprising that you are not seeing any ideographic characters. What other font-names are available to you in msmincho.ttc? Mincho? If so, try that in your userconfig, and forget the "family" until you find out what a meaningful "family" value would be for an ideographic font. Peter Argyn Kuketayev wrote: I'm using Cocoon 2.0.1. here's what I put inside my userconfig.xml I generated msminch.xml file with TTFReader utility from msmincho.ttc file. I tried an option with file-embed too. My PDF file doesn't show me chinese letters, it puts "#" instead. I know that my XML-FO file is Ok. All fonts are on my PC, so I can see Chinese in Internet Explorer. What shall I look into to find my problem?
Re: step-by-step instructions how to print Chinese in PDF?
Argyn Kuketayev wrote: it's msmincho.ttc. I ran ttfreader, it generated me the HUGE xml file ~400k. How should I extract the only required fonts? You don't. Chinese fonts are huge. You should already be aware of that. > I don't specify any fonts > explicitely inside my FO file, only font family serif or sans-serif. I'm not sure what you want to say. Register your font using some name, like "msmincho", in your userconfig.xml. Write a small FO file using some chinese characters, should work best if you assured they have glyphs in the font. Run FOP. If this doesn't work, use font-family="msmincho" on the enclosing block. If this still doesn't work, ask your boss for another assignment. J.Pietschmann
RE: step-by-step instructions how to print Chinese in PDF?
I'm using Cocoon 2.0.1. here's what I put inside my userconfig.xml I generated msminch.xml file with TTFReader utility from msmincho.ttc file. I tried an option with file-embed too. My PDF file doesn't show me chinese letters, it puts "#" instead. I know that my XML-FO file is Ok. All fonts are on my PC, so I can see Chinese in Internet Explorer. What shall I look into to find my problem? Argyn > -Original Message- > From: Argyn Kuketayev [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Friday, May 10, 2002 5:37 PM > To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' > Subject: RE: step-by-step instructions how to print Chinese in PDF? > > > > After you've located a font, check with the font directory to get > > the windows file name. It should be a TrueType font file ending > > in .ttf. > > > it's msmincho.ttc. I ran ttfreader, it generated me the HUGE > xml file ~400k. > > How should I extract the only required fonts? I don't specify > any fonts > explicitely inside my FO file, only font family serif or sans-serif. > > Argyn >
RE: step-by-step instructions how to print Chinese in PDF?
> After you've located a font, check with the font directory to get > the windows file name. It should be a TrueType font file ending > in .ttf. it's msmincho.ttc. I ran ttfreader, it generated me the HUGE xml file ~400k. How should I extract the only required fonts? I don't specify any fonts explicitely inside my FO file, only font family serif or sans-serif. Argyn
Re: step-by-step instructions how to print Chinese in PDF?
Nice reply :) --- "J.Pietschmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Argyn Kuketayev wrote: > > I don't see anything about Chinese letters in > font metrics xml files. Btw, I > > don't speak Chinese :) I can't change locale or > regional settings on the PC > > due to deployment restrictions. What glyphs are > for Chinese? I'm using UTF-8 > > encoding. > > You are supposed to try a *bit* harder. The Unicode > consortium > http://www.unicode.org > is responsible for allocating character codes. The > have a sort > of character names index online > http://www.unicode.org/charts/charindex.html > You'll have to search this, or by The Unicode Book > http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0201616335/ > and look up character codes which you need. I don't > speak chinese, > nor do I have any chinese fonts on my computer, I > can't help you > any further on this particular problem. > Once you know which Unicode codepoints you are going > to use, > locate a font. Look into you Windows Font directory, > or, better, > use the character table utility. The character table > utility > will tell you for the selected fonts whether it is a > unicode > font, and if so, you can pick a character and get > the Unicode > code point. > After you've located a font, check with the font > directory to get > the windows file name. It should be a TrueType font > file ending > in .ttf. > Follow the instructions in docs/html-docs/fonts.html > to generate > a font metrics file and register the font with FOP. > You'll have > to do this yourself. > Prepare a FO document with some characters you think > should be > chinese script, and run it through FOP. It is > possible that you > are required to explicitely select the font with the > proper glyphs. > If you see sharp signs ('#') where you expect the > chinese script > to be this means you've screwed up somewhere. > > J.Pietschmann > http://messenger.yahoo.com.au - Yahoo! Messenger - A great way to communicate long-distance for FREE!
Re: step-by-step instructions how to print Chinese in PDF?
Argyn Kuketayev wrote: > I don't see anything about Chinese letters in font metrics xml files. Btw, I > don't speak Chinese :) I can't change locale or regional settings on the PC > due to deployment restrictions. What glyphs are for Chinese? I'm using UTF-8 > encoding. You are supposed to try a *bit* harder. The Unicode consortium http://www.unicode.org is responsible for allocating character codes. The have a sort of character names index online http://www.unicode.org/charts/charindex.html You'll have to search this, or by The Unicode Book http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0201616335/ and look up character codes which you need. I don't speak chinese, nor do I have any chinese fonts on my computer, I can't help you any further on this particular problem. Once you know which Unicode codepoints you are going to use, locate a font. Look into you Windows Font directory, or, better, use the character table utility. The character table utility will tell you for the selected fonts whether it is a unicode font, and if so, you can pick a character and get the Unicode code point. After you've located a font, check with the font directory to get the windows file name. It should be a TrueType font file ending in .ttf. Follow the instructions in docs/html-docs/fonts.html to generate a font metrics file and register the font with FOP. You'll have to do this yourself. Prepare a FO document with some characters you think should be chinese script, and run it through FOP. It is possible that you are required to explicitely select the font with the proper glyphs. If you see sharp signs ('#') where you expect the chinese script to be this means you've screwed up somewhere. J.Pietschmann
RE: step-by-step instructions how to print Chinese in PDF?
> -Original Message- > From: J.Pietschmann [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Tuesday, May 07, 2002 5:02 PM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Re: step-by-step instructions how to print Chinese in PDF? > > > Argyn Kuketayev wrote: > > I have to print documents with Chinese (and other > languages). I couldn't > > find a clear instruction how to do it. > > Find a font containing glyphs for your script. > Configure it for use by FOP as describet in >docs/html-docs/fonts.html I installed W2k Pro, US version. I can see Chinese letters in IE. Now, how do make FOP show Chinese letters in my PDF? I don't see anything about Chinese letters in font metrics xml files. Btw, I don't speak Chinese :) I can't change locale or regional settings on the PC due to deployment restrictions. What glyphs are for Chinese? I'm using UTF-8 encoding. many thanks, Argyn
Re: step-by-step instructions how to print Chinese in PDF?
Argyn Kuketayev wrote: I have to print documents with Chinese (and other languages). I couldn't find a clear instruction how to do it. Find a font containing glyphs for your script. Configure it for use by FOP as describet in docs/html-docs/fonts.html Use an XML capable editor which allows you to input the characters directly and encodes the file as UTF-8 or UTF-16 or some ISO-8859-* (that's what you see in test_ja.fo), or use an ASCII-editor and use XML character references (something like Ω, which would give you an Ohm sign, the same glyph as greek upper case omega). The Unicode consortium http://www.unicode.org has character tables online. J.Pietschmann