Am 28.02.2014 um 20:41 schrieb Joshua Krämer
On 2014-02-26, 23:13, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
2. When you apply your “testfeature” to a certain font alternative (e.g. italic) it will work. [...]
Thanks. It's a bit inconvenient, because for each feature you want to apply, you have to define a separate typeface. Is it a bug, or is it intended to be like that?
This is something only Hans can answer, what I wanted to show you is that the problem isn’t related to the \definefontfamily command.
(I understand that this feature may not be needed often. I need it to apply different stretch values to a typeface I'm designing for testing purposes.)
Is there any real purpose for this feature? The letters in the second and third line don’t look beautiful because the horizontal and vertical strokes don’t match. \definefontfeature [wide] [extend=1.50] \definefontfeature [narrow] [extend=0.75] \definefontfamily [one] [serif] [Latin Modern Roman] \definefontfamily [two] [serif] [Latin Modern Roman] [features={default,wide}] \definefontfamily [three] [serif] [Latin Modern Roman] [features={default,narrow}] \definebodyfontenvironment[50pt] \starttext \switchtobodyfont[one,50pt]Stretched \switchtobodyfont[two,50pt]Stretched \switchtobodyfont[three,50pt]Stretched \stoptext Wolfgang