My apologies for my confusion, and my thanks! That did it!
On Fri, Sep 11, 2020 at 10:15 AM Wolfgang Schuster <
wolfgang.schuster.li...@gmail.com> wrote:
> T. Kurt Bond schrieb am 11.09.2020 um 16:12:
> > I tried using
> >
> "\definefontfallback[mainface][rm][Symbola][range=playingcards,force=ye
T. Kurt Bond schrieb am 11.09.2020 um 16:12:
I tried using
"\definefontfallback[mainface][rm][Symbola][range=playingcards,force=yes]"
and the PLAYING CARD ACE OF SPADES still didn't show up in the output.
It's the wrong command, you need \definefallbackfamily when you use
\definefontfontfamil
I tried using
"\definefontfallback[mainface][rm][Symbola][range=playingcards,force=yes]"
and the PLAYING CARD ACE OF SPADES still didn't show up in the output.
I'm using " ConTeXt ver: 2020.09.03 20:03 LMTX fmt: 2020.9.3 int:
english/english",
On Thu, Sep 10, 2020 at 9:05 AM Wolfgang Schuster
T. Kurt Bond schrieb am 09.09.2020 um 21:40:
I want to use the Unicode Character PLAYING CARD ACE OF SPADES in a
ConTeXt document. Because of the way the source document is created it
has to be as the actual unicode character itself, rather than a
reference to a specific character in a specifi
I want to use the Unicode Character PLAYING CARD ACE OF SPADES in a ConTeXt
document. Because of the way the source document is created it has to be
as the actual unicode character itself, rather than a reference to a
specific character in a specific font.
Here's what I've tried, but it doesn't w