At 05:46 AM 10/1/2003, Elaine Keown wrote:

For the Hebrew proposal, I'm mostly doing new
vowels/diacritics since my beloved ligatures
were outlawed.

Is there somewhere a freely available glyph
that has that little dotted circle used
to display diacritics in Unicode documentation?

I can send you one. Any other generic glyphs you need?


Is that part of the requirements, that I can
position the vowel or diacritic glyph near
the little dotted circle?

I think it is a good idea. You should try to make the glyphs as final as possible, in case they end up being the only versions available for Unicode glyph charts if the characters are accepted. So base them as closely as possible on similar glyphs in the current code charts.


And what does one call that in the design
process, the ability to position the glyph
thusly?

I presume that in your proposal you will simply make composites glyphs containing both the dotted circle and the combining mark. That should be perfectly sufficient for the proposal and for the glyph charts. Obviously, in a 'real world' font, the marks will not be sitting on dotted circles, but will be dynamically positioned relative to base characters (e.g. Hebrew consonants). The latter would be called glyph positioning or, more precisely if using a typical OpenType GPOS approach for mark positioning, anchor attachment positioning.


Also, last time I made little squares in a
graphics program to hold my scanned,
calligraphed ligatures etc.  Are the little
squares required also?  Last time everything
just went in the graphics program, which was
time-consuming but not too difficult....

I don't think this is necessary. If you want to put the glyphs in squares, you can do so in your layout or graphics program, rather than including the squares with in glyphs.


Elaine, how many characters are you thinking about proposing? If you have vector outline graphics (e.g. Illustrator EPS images), I can probably save you some time, trouble and expense and can put a font together for you.

John Hudson


Tiro Typeworks www.tiro.com Vancouver, BC [EMAIL PROTECTED]

You need a good operator to make type. If it were a
DIY affair the caster would only run for about five
minutes before the DIYer burned his butt off.
                                      - Jim Rimmer




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