Hello, Mr. Kaplan. Good to hear from you; I've enjoyed your blog.

I'm having a hard time parsing your email. As Khaled and I have pointed out, 
the problem is not one of a lack of font development as the extra dotted 
circles show. For the case of Hebrew, in particular, the SBL Hebrew font 
already has attachment points to combine the various vowels and accent marks 
with 25CC and it combines those marks well on a space, too (A less-desirable 
workaround, but one which Uniscribe and Office supported at least at one point 
- maybe they still do, but which never worked in WPF).

Since I presume all that was obvious to you from reading the thread, I feel 
like the salient part of your post must be "when no one put in the effort for 
the specific case" - but I've been putting in effort for this specific case for 
at least 6 years, through a combination of direct emails to Microsoft 
employees, bug reports on Microsoft development forums, and having our 
application developers submit bugs through their official channels and direct 
conversations with Microsoft project managers at PDC. And in all fairness, some 
of the bugs I've reported through this barrage of techniques have been fixed - 
for example, with the exception of the Syriac abbreviation mark, Syriac is 
looking quite good in WPF 4 (many thanks!). But I've never gotten any traction 
on the issue at hand.

So, are you the guy I need to be forwarding all my documentation to? Or do you 
know to whom at Microsoft I need to be reporting in order for this case to get 
a good hearing? I'm more than willing to put in all the effort you could 
possibly want - this is a very pressing issue for us, since we've published 
reams of grammatical material that now look very ugly, particularly since 
moving our platform to WPF.

Thanks,
Vincent
________________________________________
From: Michael S. Kaplan [[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, June 29, 2010 9:41 PM
To: Murray Sargent
Cc: Vincent Setterholm; 'Asmus Freytag'; Khaled Ghetas; [email protected]; 
Otto Stolz; '[email protected]'
Subject: RE: Generic Base Letter

Speaking as an MS employee who has seen how easy it is to put arbitrary
combining marks on scripts like Latin and Cyrillic that don't look very
good if the font has neither combined form glyphs or knowledge of
attachment points, it may be the case that some of these situations that
don't look good have more to do with the fact that making it look good
typographically when no one put in the effort for the specific case may be
simply the price one pays.

Here is a time it came for Cyrillic over five years ago (in that case for
Bulgarian): http://blogs.msdn.com/367985.aspx

Michael

Reply via email to