Hi,
Sorry for lated review of your patch. I made slight revise
to your patch, it's almost ready to commit.
One of my anxiety was that the priority to the black/white
evenness can reduce the contrast of the complex glyph.
Please find attached picture comparing the results by
HeiseiMaruGo-W4 at
One of my anxiety was that the priority to the black/white evenness
can reduce the contrast of the complex glyph. Please find attached
picture comparing the results by HeiseiMaruGo-W4 at 16pt @ 72dpi. In
my personal impression, the legibility of the strokes in enclosed
area (like 日 or 目) is
On Wed, 20 Apr 2011 12:35:29 +0200 (CEST)
Werner LEMBERG w...@gnu.org wrote:
One of my anxiety was that the priority to the black/white evenness
can reduce the contrast of the complex glyph. Please find attached
picture comparing the results by HeiseiMaruGo-W4 at 16pt @ 72dpi. In
my personal
On 04/20/2011 06:35 PM, Werner LEMBERG wrote:
Thanks for reviewing. Do you have an idea how to increase the
legibility of the longest strokes? Contrary to the proposed patch I
think that this what you suggest is quite hard a job to achieve since
you not only have to do feature analysis,
Just I've committed your patch to git head, thanks!
Regards,
mpsuzuki
r6144 wrote:
在 2011-04-20三的 19:57 +0900,mpsuz...@hiroshima-u.ac.jp写道:
On Wed, 20 Apr 2011 12:35:29 +0200 (CEST)
Werner LEMBERG w...@gnu.org wrote:
One of my anxiety was that the priority to the black/white evenness
can
在 2011-04-20三的 19:57 +0900,mpsuz...@hiroshima-u.ac.jp写道:
On Wed, 20 Apr 2011 12:35:29 +0200 (CEST)
Werner LEMBERG w...@gnu.org wrote:
One of my anxiety was that the priority to the black/white evenness
can reduce the contrast of the complex glyph. Please find attached
picture comparing
Some Chinese characters, such as 量 and 置, have a large number of
horizontal stems. At ordinary sizes, the autohinter will often
clump adjacent stems together; although the result remains readable,
the unevenness of black and white looks rather ugly.
afcjk.patch is my patch that attempts
Hi,
On Sun, 20 Feb 2011 07:43:54 +0100 (CET)
Werner LEMBERG w...@gnu.org wrote:
Some Chinese characters, such as 量 and 置, have a large number of
horizontal stems. At ordinary sizes, the autohinter will often
clump adjacent stems together; although the result remains readable,
the unevenness