bug in fontinst 1.801: duplicated kernings (was: ae fonts Q)
Lars Hellström
Lars.Hellstrom@math.umu.se
Tue, 29 Sep 1998 17:35:15 +0100 (MET)
Bernd Raichle wrote:
[snip]
>Can you please keep it in such a way, that at most one kerning
>instruction and at most one ligature instruction for each pair of
>characters will be possible? I.e., it will be still possible to have
>one kern _and_ one ligature instruction for the same glyph pair?
That's no problem, I just move the beginning of a group and snip some code
(as for ligatures, I would believe it is rather a responsibility of the ETX
file writer to see to that a ligature isn't repeated).
>Reason: This ``feature'' will be needed in the future. Currently I'm
>implementing a replacement of TeX's internal ligature and kerning
>routines for the next e-TeX version.
This complicates things. One would still want the exclusive behaviour for
fonts that should be used with normal TeX.
> The new ligature/kerning builder
>is able to first create ligatures (ignoring all kerning instructions
>in the font's lig/kern table) and then insert appropriate kerning
>between the resulting char resp. ligature nodes (ignoring all ligature
>instructions). As one positive side effect of the new routines this
>will allow you to insert kerning between two ligatures which is
>currently not possible with TeX.
Let me see if I understand this correctly. You add the capability to kern
between two ligatures, whereas with standard TeX you could only add a kern
between the first ligature glyph and the glyph which is the first character
of the second ligature. This does not call for both a ligature and a kern.
> Another feature of the new
>implementation will be the possibility to cleanly prevent the creation
>of a ligature even if the ligature is declared in the font's lig/kern
>table but in this case it will sometimes be necessary to add kerning
>between the two glyphs. Thus the ability to have a kerning _and_ a
>ligature instruction for a glyph pair should be kept.
I see. If the ligature is overrided by the user, then the font might also
contain a kern, which is then inserted by TeX instead of making a ligature.
Hmm... Due to the fact that it primarily is normal TeX that should be
supported, I believe it actually would be simpler to implement a version
that would impose the one ligature limit as well (i.e., as you described
above). Switching between normal TeX settings and e-TeX settings can be
simplified to redefining one control sequence.
I will think about it.
/Lars Hellström