Am Wed, 09 Feb 2011 17:36:41 +0100 schrieb Hans Hagen:
Also if a font is defective (e.g. wrong kerning, missing glyphs, faulty glyph names, missing open type features ...) a virtual font which improves this font should be useful for all formats which can use it, so I don't think that a format specific location is sensible.
We have a different machinery for things like that and support is integrated into context (and targets at context). Also, there is an experimental vf creation interface that will be extended.
Where is this interface? Does some documentation exists about how it works and how it can be used?
(I must say I'm wondering a bit why problems with fonts are so seldom discussed in the context list. In the last weeks I have seen in the xetex list a discussion how to add missing glyphs to a font, a discussion about kerning flaws, discussions about bad accent placement, in another group someone missed the "m with dot" in a font, in the luatex.user list you can find a message about a problem with fea-files and kerning, and so one ... Why do context user seems to have no problems with defective fonts? Do they use a smaller set of fonts?)
I don't know. Personally I just reject a font if it's flawed esp because there are enough fonts out there that are ok. And I definitely (as context user) don't want to go along the route of using all kind of patches to fonts, because we then end up with the same mess as we have with special encodings in traditional tex.
Well it is certainly easier if there are less encodings. But the small encodings had one advantage: if you used a e.g. T1-encoded font you not only knew which characters are encoded and their position but also that the characters are actually present. You could safely switch from one font to another. With unicode fonts this is no longer the case. If you switch fonts there is always the danger that a char or an accent suddenly disappears.
The lm and gyre font projects are in fact triggered by people within the context community as a solution to all these incomplete fonts that have been used for ages. Fortunately these projects soon became generic and were adopted and supported by latex as well. (In context we switched immediately to them.)
The lm and gyre fonts are fine. But they cover only a small part of the glyphs used in the world. Many of the discussions I see are started by people trying to use non-western/non-latin scripts.
I'm glad that we got rid of the font mess and would like to keep it that way. If a font is bugged ... preferably fix the font. (We currently impose a few runtime fixes to e.g. cambria but I'd expect that to be a temporary thing.) Don't get me wrong, context users can do a lot of tweaking if they want, which can be seen from questions on the list with respect to layout, but maybe they don't want to create a dependency on tweaks in fonts.
Fixing a font needs either the rights to do it oneself or the will of the author(s) to do it. Both is often not the case. And fixing a font may remove a dependency to a virtual font but it will add a dependency to the fixed font version - which can get quite difficult if more than one "fixed" version exists. -- Ulrike Fischer