On 4/11/2016 9:06 PM, Jan Tosovsky wrote:
On 2016-04-09 Jan Tosovsky wrote:
for an illustration I wanted to colorize all ligatures, but the following method is not reliable for three character ligatures - which ends up black.
While tested with Palatino, it can be simulated even with a default font (however there are missing ffi and ffl ligatures).
\definefontfamily[palatino][rm][Palatino Linotype] [features={default, quality}] \setupbodyfont[palatino]
\starttext Je{\red ff}, the o{\red ffi}ce on the {\red fi}rst {\red fl}oor is o{\red ffl}ine. \stoptext
What is happening here?
Any idea how to properly colorize those ligatures?
update ----------------------------------------------------------------- Hans Hagen | PRAGMA ADE Ridderstraat 27 | 8061 GH Hasselt | The Netherlands tel: 038 477 53 69 | www.pragma-ade.com | www.pragma-pod.nl -----------------------------------------------------------------
On 2016-04-11 Hans Hagen wrote:
On 4/11/2016 9:06 PM, Jan Tosovsky wrote:
On 2016-04-09 Jan Tosovsky wrote:
for an illustration I wanted to colorize all ligatures, but the following method is not reliable for three character ligatures - which ends up black.
While tested with Palatino, it can be simulated even with a default font (however there are missing ffi and ffl ligatures).
\definefontfamily[palatino][rm][Palatino Linotype] [features={default, quality}] \setupbodyfont[palatino]
\starttext Je{\red ff}, the o{\red ffi}ce on the {\red fi}rst {\red fl}oor is o{\red ffl}ine. \stoptext
What is happening here?
Any idea how to properly colorize those ligatures?
update
Wow! It works now, thanks a lot! Jan
participants (2)
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Hans Hagen
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Jan Tosovsky