Vit Zyka wrote:
Actually I discovered the source of the problem with \tcaron! There exists enco-ecm.tex file with some exceptions. And there is
\definecharacter tcaron {\buildtextaccent\textcaron t}
If I comment this line, expansion is not needed. I suggest to omit it since \tcaron is now present in lm.
If and only if you work with lm & ec. Otherwise building of accents is quite useful. (How can I get ec in Antiqwa?)
But \WORD I do not use (it was only product of my debugging) I use pseudo caps and there the problem preserves. Files attached and texfont --fontroot=X: --en=ec --ve=public --co=lm --source=auto --ca=0.8 lmbx10
Another *extremely* strange observation. In a document with ec encoding and some accented characters, searching for 'č' simply doesn't work. I don't understand why. I know very little about PDF, but in the resulting document there was this line present: /CharSet (/breve/one/D/U/Y/u/Ccaron/Scaron/Tcaron/Zcaron/ccaron/tcaron) with more or less only the characters I used. The line seems to be OK, ccaron seems to be present. Searching for 'š' works as expected (even lower/uppercase is recognised), but at the place of 'č' only c is recognised (if I copy-pase, only c remains at that place). I thought that it was only Acrobat's fault, but searching for the same letter in another document worked OK (documentation for Antiqwa for example). Minimal example: \usetypescript[modern][ec] \setupbodyfont[10pt,rm] \starttext \ccaron\scaron \stoptext and then either searching or converting to plain text. Mojca