On Fri, 13 Sep 2013 02:41:33 +0200
Hans Hagen
On 9/12/2013 10:05 PM, john Culleton wrote:
Using mkiv to what degree can one depend on the encoding of a font to be in texnansi form?
1. typescript fonts?
2. otf fonts?
3. type 1 fonts?
4. ttf fonts?
5. No guarantees?
And does it make a difference if one uses \simplefonts versus typescripts?
encoding is irrelevant ... even texnansi encoded fonts (in which case the afm only has that subset) will be remapped to unicode ... there is no other encoding than utf
Hans
Excellent! Now in MKIV how would I encode an opening quote mark American style? In previous TeX programs it was always ``. The MKIV substitute \quotation{foo} is not practical for my application, where the raw input code may use the ditto mark " for both opening and closing quotes. I am looking for something in MKIV equivalent to \char92 in plain TeX. On the unicode table I find the hex value 008013 but I don't know how to plug that in to a macro that redefines the first occurrence of " to be that character, and the second occurrence to be hex 000814 etc. I can write the macro, I just need the expression equivalent to \char that gives me such characters in MKIV. -- John Culleton Wexford Press Free list of books for self-publishers: http://wexfordpress.net/shortlist.html PDF e-book: "Create Book Covers with Scribus" available at http://www.booklocker.com/books/4055.html