![]() ![]() new minimum version of fontforge is 20061014 (by Ben Laenen). It’s a more typograph-ish font, what with having smaller digits as well, and all that. fixed bugs 3170 plus other small fixes (wrong direction, duplicate points. On the other hand, looking at and (braces’ lower end is ok, upper end could be a bit higher) don’t look well, but I find it bearable. Note 1D48-9 are not references due to apparent FontForge bug, that says scaled references go in wrong direction. matrix)) return newref def validateGlyphs(font): Fixes some common FontForge validation warnings, currently handles: wrong direction flipped. See the image linked below for an example of this : https. otf files that displays a small menu of alternate characters when the user hovers over a highlighted character in a text box. ![]() (Additionally, thanks to subpixel hinting, even at 36pt the round parenthesēs don’t exactly align, but meh.) I normally know that the tips of curly and angle braces like }< align. I’ve spent the last few months learning Fontforge in my free time so I can implement this project but I’ve hit a stumbling block. ![]() Your comment made me look at that font a bit more, and I am a bit surprised about the curly braces indeed. I’ve also fixed up a few fontconfig warnings. Any self-intersecting contour, for example, is of indeterminate direction, and the options to set. So far, it seems possible to draw one glyph within about 5 minutes, but then I spend up to an hour solving various problems that fontforge tells me stand in the way of creating a font, and that I only partially understand. But sometimes a contour is of indeterminate direction. (The Teχ/LᴬTᴇX one is a version of Raph Levien’s, but changed, and AIUI also based on an older version and never rebased, but I don’t see insurmountable problems with it except for the small glyph count as I said, I use it in environments that don’t support bitmap fonts like IntelliJ and Android.) Im trying to assess whether it is doable to use fontforge to create a font for Egyptian hieroglyphs, containing over 1000 signs. It’s actually a not-fork of the Teχ/LᴬTᴇX version of the font, just realising the OpenType features that the inconsolata.sty parameters “varl” and “varq” enable, since almost all programs don’t do OpenType features. ![]()
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