30/06/11 @ 11:39 (+0200), Ulrike Fischer escriu:
> Assuming that you want to change only the numbers:
>
> \documentclass[12pt,a4paper]{article}
> \usepackage[charter]{mathdesign}
> \usepackage{fontspec}
> \setmainfont[Scale=0.95]{Charis SIL}
>
>
> \normalfont
> \makeatletter
>
> \DeclareSymbolF
Am Mon, 27 Jun 2011 16:18:30 +0200 schrieb Ernest Adrogué:
> Hi,
>
> 27/06/11 @ 08:32 (+0100), David Cottenden escriu:
>> Greetings,
>>
>> I'm not very expert - so don't quiz me overly - but my understanding
>> is that setmathrm changes the maths roman font, whereas by default
>> the maths digit
Hi,
27/06/11 @ 08:32 (+0100), David Cottenden escriu:
> Greetings,
>
> I'm not very expert - so don't quiz me overly - but my understanding
> is that setmathrm changes the maths roman font, whereas by default
> the maths digits are drawn from the normal maths font. You can
> change which font the
26/06/11 @ 18:10 (+0200), Tobias Schoel escriu:
> that is done by the range key in the \setmathfont-command from the
> unicode-math package. (At least, if I have understood the
> documentation of unicode-math correctly.)
I think unicode-math only works with Unicode math fonts.
Here, I was using no
Greetings,
I'm not very expert - so don't quiz me overly - but my understanding is
that setmathrm changes the maths roman font, whereas by default the
maths digits are drawn from the normal maths font. You can change which
font the digits are drawn from with:
\DeclareMathSymbol{0}\mathalph
Hi,
that is done by the range key in the \setmathfont-command from the
unicode-math package. (At least, if I have understood the documentation
of unicode-math correctly.)
bye
Toscho
Am 26.06.2011 15:34, schrieb Ernest Adrogué:
Hi there,
I was doing some tests with various math font packag
Hi there,
I was doing some tests with various math font packages
such as fourier, mathdesign, txfonts, etc., and I realised
that these packages could also be used with other text fonts
other than the fonts they were intended to be used with.
For example, mathdesign uses math symbols (italics and