Hello Taco, On 10/3/07, Taco Hoekwater wrote:
Your email message uses the chinese simplified (GB2312) encoding, is that intentional?
Emmm ... no. But I have no influence on encoding - there seems to be some "smart" algorithm behind gmail, which tries to guess which encoding to use. Usually it takes ascii or utf-8, but apparently it sometimes favors other encodings for some reason :(
Mojca Miklavec wrote:
Hello,
While trying to convert some stuff from HTML to PDF (using LuaTeX) I have noticed some minor problems: unicode math characters work OK in text mode (under assumption that the font has them), but not in math mode. In pdfTeX they work OK in both cases. (That behaviour is expected, but not necessary desired.)
Is there any cure to it?
Definitions like these should work in luatex (and xetex):
\definemathcharacter [φ] [nothing] [lcgreek] ["1E]
That is not font-related, it is just input remapping based on \mathchardef, the same thing happens in traditional tex.
Thanks a lot. It has made my day :) However, your example worked OK, but \definemathsymbol [≤] [rel] [sy] ["14] \definemathsymbol [·] [bin] [sy] ["01] didn't Thanks, Mojca (čšž - hopefully gmail will choose utf-8 now :)