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Re: [Groff] Installing Russian Type-1 Fonts
From: |
Anton Shepelev |
Subject: |
Re: [Groff] Installing Russian Type-1 Fonts |
Date: |
Thu, 18 Aug 2011 19:43:20 +0400 |
Hello, Werner, and thank you for the reply.
I got the font working, although I do not completely
understand what is going on internally. In addition,
the CMCyr package, which I registered with Groff, is
only an extension to the Computer Modern fonts hav-
ing only Russian-specific symbols, and it needs to
be combined with the basic CM fonts before it can be
used with Groff, which I don't know how to do yet.
In this connection, does anybody know of a tool for
merging Type-1 fonts, with non-intersecting glyph
sets, of course?
I got a question about groff's handling of UTF-8
input. GROFF_CHAR(7) says:
On ASCII platforms, input character codes in
the range 0 to 127 (decimal) represent the
usual 7-bit ASCII characters, while codes
between 127 and 255 are interpreted as the
corresponding characters in the latin1
(ISO-8859-1) code set by default. This map-
ping is contained in the file latin1.tmac
and can be changed by loading a different
input encoding.
As I understand, the -KUTF-8 option causes the input
UTF-8-encoded file to be converted into 8-bit. But
how does Groff know how these 8-bit input characters
map into, say, glyph names for Russian letters? Does
the -K option create an input mapping similar to
latin1.tmac on-the-fly, depending on which symbols
are found in the unicode source file? I don't think
it can have one predefined input mapping because for
different languages the same 8-bit input characters
must be mapped into defferent glyphs...
> No. groff accesses Type 1 fonts always by glyph
> names.
GROFF_FONT(5) says this about glyph-definition lines
in font files:
The code field gives the code which the
postprocessor uses toprint the glyph.
[...]
The entity_name field gives an ASCII string
identifying the glyph which the postproces-
sor uses to print that glyph. This field is
optional and is currently used by grops to
build subencoding arrays for PS fonts con-
taining more than 256 glyphs...
Is this part obsolette, particularly -- the lines
about grops using glyph names _only_ when dealing
with fonts with more than 256 characters? Said CMCyr
fonts have only 66 characters yet seem to be
accessed by glyph name...
> Internally, all input characters, regardless of
> the input encoding, are converted to entities from
> the Groff Glyph List (GGL; you can find the
> details in groff.texinfo).
According to the manual, GGL is a fixed set of
glyphs, and I didn't find glyphs for Russian letters
among them (in groff_char.7). Conversely, the glyphs
for Russian letters seem to be calculated algorith-
mically:
Glyph names not listed in groff_char(7) are
derived algorithmically, using a simplified
version of the Adobe Glyph List (AGL) algo-
rithm [...] The (frozen) set of glyph names
which can't be derived algorithmically is
called groff glyph list (GGL).
Or did I misunderstand you and/or the manual?
Anton
- [Groff] Installing Russian Type-1 Fonts, Anton Shepelev, 2011/08/16
- Re: [Groff] Installing Russian Type-1 Fonts, Werner LEMBERG, 2011/08/17
- Re: [Groff] Installing Russian Type-1 Fonts,
Anton Shepelev <=
- Re: [Groff] Installing Russian Type-1 Fonts, Werner LEMBERG, 2011/08/18
- Re: [Groff] Installing Russian Type-1 Fonts, Anton Shepelev, 2011/08/19
- Re: [Groff] Installing Russian Type-1 Fonts, Werner LEMBERG, 2011/08/19
- Re: [Groff] Installing Russian Type-1 Fonts, Anton Shepelev, 2011/08/19
- Re: [Groff] Installing Russian Type-1 Fonts, Anton Shepelev, 2011/08/19
- Re: [Groff] Installing Russian Type-1 Fonts, Werner LEMBERG, 2011/08/20
- Re: [Groff] Installing Russian Type-1 Fonts, Anton Shepelev, 2011/08/20
- Re: [Groff] Installing Russian Type-1 Fonts, Werner LEMBERG, 2011/08/20
- Re: [Groff] Installing Russian Type-1 Fonts, Anton Shepelev, 2011/08/20
- Re: [Groff] Installing Russian Type-1 Fonts, Werner LEMBERG, 2011/08/20