408 lines
16 KiB
Text
Executable file
408 lines
16 KiB
Text
Executable file
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Unicode versions of the X11 "misc-fixed-*" fonts
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------------------------------------------------
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Markus Kuhn <http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/> -- 2003-01-17
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This package contains the X Window System bitmap fonts
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-Misc-Fixed-*-*-*--*-*-*-*-C-*-ISO10646-1
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These are Unicode (ISO 10646-1) extensions of the classic ISO 8859-1
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X11 terminal fonts that are widely used with many X11 applications
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such as xterm, emacs, etc.
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COVERAGE
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--------
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None of these fonts covers Unicode completely. Complete coverage
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simply would not make much sense here. Unicode 3.0 contains over 49000
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characters, and the large majority of them are Chinese/Japanese/Korean
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Han ideographs (~28000) and Korean Hangul Syllables (~11000) that
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cannot adequately be displayed in the small pixel sizes of the fixed
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fonts. Similarly, Arabic characters are difficult to fit nicely
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together with European characters into the fixed character cells and
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X11 lacks the ligature substitution mechanisms required for using
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Indic scripts.
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Therefore these fonts primarily attempt to cover Unicode subsets that
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fit together with European scripts. This includes the Latin, Greek,
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Cyrillic, Armenian, Georgian, and Hebrew scripts, plus a lot of
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linguistic, technical and mathematical symbols. Some of the fixed
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fonts now also cover Arabic, Thai, Ethiopian, halfwidth Katakana, and
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some other non-European scripts.
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We have defined 3 different target character repertoires (ISO 10646-1
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subsets) that the various fonts were checked against for minimal
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guaranteed coverage:
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TARGET1 616 characters
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Covers all characters of ISO 8859 part 1-5,7-10,13-16,
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CEN MES-1, ISO 6937, Microsoft CP1251/CP1252, DEC VT100
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graphics symbols, and the replacement and default
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character. It is intended for small bold, italic, and
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proportional fonts, for which adding block graphics
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characters would make little sense. This repertoire
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covers the following ISO 10646-1:2000 collections
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completely: 1-3, 8, 12.
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TARGET2 885 characters
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Adds to TARGET1 the characters of the Adobe/Microsoft
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Windows Glyph List 4 (WGL4), plus a selected set of
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mathematical characters (covering most of ISO 31-11
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high-school level math symbols) and some combining
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characters. It is intended to be covered by all normal
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"fixed" fonts and covers all European IBM, Microsoft, and
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Macintosh character sets. This repertoire covers the
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following ISO 10646-1:2000 (including Amd 1:2002)
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collections completely: 1-3, 8, 12, 33, 45.
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TARGET3 3228 characters
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Adds to TARGET2 all characters of all European scripts
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(Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Armenian, Georgian), all
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phonetic alphabet symbols, many mathematical symbols
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(including all those available in LaTeX), all typographic
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punctuation, all box-drawing characters, control code
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pictures, graphical shapes and some more that you would
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expect in a very comprehensive Unicode 3.2 font for
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European users. It is intended for some of the more
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useful and more widely used normal "fixed" fonts. This
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repertoire is a superset of all graphical characters in
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CEN MES-3A and covers the following ISO 10646-1:2000
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(including Amd 1:2002) collections completely: 1-12, 27,
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30-31, 32 (only graphical characters), 33-42, 44-47, 63,
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65, 70 (only graphical characters).
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CURRENT STATUS:
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6x13.bdf 8x13.bdf 9x15.bdf 9x18.bdf 10x20.bdf:
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Complete (TARGET3 reached and checked)
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5x7.bdf 5x8.bdf 6x9.bdf 6x10.bdf 6x12.bdf 7x13.bdf 7x14.bdf clR6x12.bdf:
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Complete (TARGET2 reached and checked)
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6x13B.bdf 7x13B.bdf 7x14B.bdf 8x13B.bdf 9x15B.bdf 9x18B.bdf:
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Complete (TARGET1 reached and checked)
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6x13O.bdf 7x13O.bdf 8x13O.bdf
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Complete (TARGET1 minus Hebrew and block graphics)
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The supplement package
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http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/download/ucs-fonts-asian.tar.gz
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contains the following additional square fonts with Han characters for
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East Asian users:
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12x13ja.bdf:
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Covers TARGET2, JIS X 0208, Hangul, and a few more. This font is
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primarily intended to provide Japanese full-width Hiragana,
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Katakana, and Kanji for applications that take the remaining
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("halfwidth") characters from 6x13.bdf. The Greek lowercase
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characters in it are still a bit ugly and will need some work.
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18x18ja.bdf:
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Covers all JIS X 0208, JIS X 0212, GB 2312-80, KS X 1001:1992,
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ISO 8859-1,2,3,4,5,7,9,10,15, CP437, CP850 and CP1252 characters,
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plus a few more, where priority was given to Japanese han style
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variants. This font should have everything needed to cover the
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full ISO-2022-JP-2 (RFC 1554) repertoire. This font is primarily
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intended to provide Japanese full-width Hiragana, Katakana, and
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Kanji for applications that take the remaining ("halfwidth")
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characters from 9x18.bdf.
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18x18ko.bdf:
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Covers the same repertoire as 18x18ja plus full coverage of all
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Hangul syllables and priority was given to Hanja glyphs in the
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unified CJK area as they are used for writing Korean.
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The 9x18 and 6x12 fonts are recommended for use with overstriking
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combining characters.
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Bug reports, suggestions for improvement, and especially contributed
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extensions are very welcome!
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INSTALLATION
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------------
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You install the fonts under Unix roughly like this (details depending
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on your system of course):
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System-wide installation (root access required):
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cd submission/
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make
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su
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mv -b *.pcf.gz /usr/lib/X11/fonts/misc/
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cd /usr/lib/X11/fonts/misc/
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mkfontdir
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xset fp rehash
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Alternative: Installation in your private user directory:
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cd submission/
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make
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mkdir -p ~/local/lib/X11/fonts/
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mv *.pcf.gz ~/local/lib/X11/fonts/
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cd ~/local/lib/X11/fonts/
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mkfontdir
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xset +fp ~/local/lib/X11/fonts (put this last line also in ~/.xinitrc)
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Now you can have a look at say the 6x13 font with the command
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xfd -fn '-misc-fixed-medium-r-semicondensed--13-120-75-75-c-60-iso10646-1'
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If you want to have short names for the Unicode fonts, you can also
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append the fonts.alias file to that in the directory where you install
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the fonts, call "mkfontdir" and "xset fp rehash" again, and then you
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can also write
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xfd -fn 6x13U
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Note: If you use an old version of xfontsel, you might notice that it
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treats every font that contains characters >0x00ff as a Japanese JIS
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font and therefore selects inappropriate sample characters for display
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of ISO 10646-1 fonts. An updated xfontsel version with this bug fixed
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comes with XFree86 4.0 or newer.
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If you use the Exceed X server on Microsoft Windows, then you will
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have to convert the BDF files into Microsoft FON files using the
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"Compile Fonts" function of Exceed xconfig. See the file exceed.txt
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for more information.
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There is one significant efficiency problem that X11R6 has with the
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sparsely populated ISO10646-1 fonts. X11 transmits and allocates 12
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bytes with the XFontStruct data structure for the difference between
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the lowest and the highest code value found in a font, no matter
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whether the code positions in between are used for characters or not.
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Even a tiny font that contains only two glyphs at positions 0x0000 and
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0xfffd causes 12 bytes * 65534 codes = 786 kbytes to be requested and
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stored by the client. Since all the ISO10646-1 BDF files provided in
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this package contain characters in the U+00xx (ASCII) and U+ffxx
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(ligatures, etc.) range, all of them would result in 786 kbyte large
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XCharStruct arrays in the per_char array of the corresponding
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XFontStruct (even for CharCell fonts!) when loaded by an X client.
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Until this problem is fixed by extending the X11 font protocol and
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implementation, non-CJK ISO10646-1 fonts that lack the (anyway not
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very interesting) characters above U+31FF seem to be the best
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compromise. The bdftruncate.pl program in this package can be used to
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deactivate any glyphs above a threshold code value in BDF files. This
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way, we get relatively memory-economic ISO10646-1 fonts that cause
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"only" 150 kbyte large XCharStruct arrays to be allocated. The
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deactivated glyphs are still present in the BDF files, but with an
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encoding value of -1 that causes them to be ignored.
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The ISO10646-1 fonts can not only be used directly by Unicode aware
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software, they can also be used to create any 8-bit font. The
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ucs2any.pl Perl script converts a ISO10646-1 BDF font into a BDF font
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file with some different encoding. For instance the command
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perl ucs2any.pl 6x13.bdf MAPPINGS/8859-7.TXT ISO8859-7
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will generate the file 6x13-ISO8859-7.bdf according to the 8859-7.TXT
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Latin/Greek mapping table, which available from
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<ftp://ftp.unicode.org/Public/MAPPINGS/>. [The shell script
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./map_fonts automatically generates a subdirectory derived-fonts/ with
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many *.bdf and *.pcf.gz 8-bit versions of all the
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-misc-fixed-*-iso10646-1 fonts.]
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When you do a "make" in the submission/ subdirectory as suggested in
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the installation instructions above, this will generate exactly the
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set of fonts that have been submitted to the XFree86 project for
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inclusion into XFree86 4.0. These consists of all the ISO10646-1 fonts
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processed with "bdftruncate.pl U+3200" plus a selected set of derived
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8-bit fonts generated with ucs2any.pl.
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I recommend to play around with the UTF-8 editor Yudit. To use for
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example the 6x13 font with Yudit 1.5, you just have to select the
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settings
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Font=Misc Unicode
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Size=13
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Slant=Roman
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Spacing=CharCell
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Weight=Medium
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Add.Style=Any
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Avg.Width=60
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in the Font menu or in the ~/.yuditrc config file. Yudit is a nice
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text file editor with UTF-8 support, available from
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http://www.yudit.org/
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ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/apps/editors/X/yudit-1.5.tar.gz
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You can also use these fonts with Emacs 20.6 or higher. For more
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information, see
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http://www.cs.ust.hk/faculty/otfried/Mule/
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Every font comes with a *.repertoire-utf8 file that lists all the
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characters in this font.
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CONTRIBUTING
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------------
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If you want to help me in extending or improving the fonts, or if you
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want to start your own ISO 10646-1 font project, you will have to edit
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BDF font files. This is most comfortably done with the xmbdfed font
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editor (version 4.3 or higher), which is available from
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ftp://crl.nmsu.edu/CLR/multiling/General/
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Once you are familiar with xmbdfed, you will notice that it is no
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problem to design up to 100 nice characters per hour (even more if
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only placing accents is involved).
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Information about other X11 font tools and Unicode fonts for X11 in
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general can be found on
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http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/ucs-fonts.html
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The latest version of this package is available from
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http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/download/ucs-fonts.tar.gz
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If you want to contribute, then get the very latest version of this
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package, check which glyphs are still missing or inappropriate for
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your needs, and send me whatever you had the time to add and fix. Just
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email me the extended BDF-files back, or even better, send me a patch
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file of what you changed. The best way of preparing a patch file is
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./touch_id newfile.bdf
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diff -d -u -F STARTCHAR oldfile.bdf newfile.bdf >file.diff
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which ensures that the patch file preserves information about which
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exact version you worked on and what character each "hunk" changes.
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I will try to update this packet on a daily basis. By sending me
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extensions to these fonts, you agree that the resulting improved font
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files will remain in the public domain for everyone's free use. Always
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make sure to load the very latest version of the package immediately
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before your start, and send me your results as soon as you are done,
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in order to avoid revision overlaps with other contributors.
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Please try to be careful with the glyphs you generate:
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- Always look first at existing similar characters in order to
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preserve a consistent look and feel for the entire font and
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within the font family. For block graphics characters and geometric
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symbols, take care of correct alignment.
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- Read issues.txt, which contains some design hints for certain
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characters.
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- All characters of CharCell (C) fonts must strictly fit into
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the pixel matrix and absolutely no out-of-box ink is allowed.
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- The character cells will be displayed directly next to each other,
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without any additional pixels in between. Therefore, always make
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sure that at least the rightmost pixel column remains white, as
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otherwise letters will stick together, except of course for
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characters -- like Arabic or block graphics -- that are supposed to
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stick together.
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- Place accents as low as possible on the Latin characters.
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- Try to keep the shape of accents consistent among each other and
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with the combining characters in the U+03xx range.
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- Use xmbdfed only to edit the BDF file directly and do not import
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the font that you want to edit from the X server. Use xmbdfed 4.3
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or higher.
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- The glyph names should be the Adobe names for Unicode characters
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<http://partners.adobe.com/asn/developer/typeforum/unicodegn.html>,
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as xmbdfed can set them automatically if it is configured
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with the location of the Adobe "glyphlist.txt" file in
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"adobe_name_file" in "~/.xmbdfed". For xmbdfed 4.5 and older, use
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<http://partners.adobe.com/asn/developer/type/glyphlist-old.txt>.
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- Be careful to not change the FONTBOUNDINGBOX box accidentally in
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a patch.
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You should have a copy of the ISO 10646 standard
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ISO/IEC 10646-1:2000, Information technology -- Universal
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Multiple-Octet Coded Character Set (UCS) -- Part 1: Architecture
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and Basic Multilingual Plane, International Organization for
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Standardization, Geneva, 2000.
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http://www.iso.ch/cate/d29819.html
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and/or the Unicode 3.0 book:
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The Unicode Consortium: The Unicode Standard, Version 3.0,
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Reading, MA, Addison-Wesley Developers Press, 2000,
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ISBN 0-201-61633-5.
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0201616335/mgk25
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All these fonts are from time to time resubmitted to the XFree86
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project (they have been in there since XFree86 4.0), X.Org, Sun, and
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to other X server developers for inclusion into their normal X11
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distributions.
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Starting with XFree86 4.0, xterm has included UTF-8 support. This
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version is also available from
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http://dickey.his.com/xterm/xterm.html
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Please make the developer of your favourite software aware of the
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UTF-8 definition in RFC 2279 and of the existence of this font
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collection. For more information on how to use UTF-8, please check out
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http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/unicode.html
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ftp://ftp.ilog.fr/pub/Users/haible/utf8/Unicode-HOWTO.html
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where you will also find information on joining the
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linux-utf8@nl.linux.org mailing list.
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A number of UTF-8 example text files can be found in the examples/
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subdirectory or on
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http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/ucs/examples/
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CONTRIBUTORS
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Robert Brady <rwb197@ecs.soton.ac.uk> and Birger Langkjer
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<birger.langkjer@image.dk> contributed thousands of glyphs and made
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very substantial contributions and improvements on almost all fonts.
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Constantine Stathopoulos <cstath@irismedia.gr> contributed all the
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Greek characters. Markus Kuhn <Markus.Kuhn@cl.cam.ac.uk> did most 6x13
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glyphs and the italic fonts and provided many more glyphs,
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coordination, and quality assurance for the other fonts. Mark Leisher
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<mleisher@crl.nmsu.edu> contributed to 6x13 Armenian, Georgian, the
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first version of Latin Extended Block A and some Cyrillic. Serge V.
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Vakulenko <vak@crox.net.kiae.su> donated the original Cyrillic glyphs
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from his 6x13 ISO 8859-5 font. Nozomi Ytow <nozomi@biol.tsukuba.ac.jp>
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contributed 6x13 halfwidth Katakana. Henning Brunzel
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<hbrunzel@meta-systems.de> contributed glyphs to 10x20.bdf. Theppitak
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Karoonboonyanan <thep@linux.thai.net> contributed Thai for 7x13,
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7x13B, 7x13O, 7x14, 7x14B, 8x13, 8x13B, 8x13O, 9x15, 9x15B, and 10x20.
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Karl Koehler <koehler@or.uni-bonn.de> contributed Arabic to 9x15,
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9x15B, and 10x20 and Roozbeh Pournader <roozbeh@sharif.ac.ir> and
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Behdad Esfahbod revised and extended Arabic in 10x20. Raphael Finkel
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<raphael@cs.uky.edu> revised Hebrew/Yiddish in 10x20. Jungshik Shin
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<jshin@pantheon.yale.edu> prepared 18x18ko.bdf. Won-kyu Park
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<wkpark@chem.skku.ac.kr> prepared the Hangul glyphs used in 12x13ja.
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Janne V. Kujala <jvk@iki.fi> contributed 4x6. Daniel Yacob
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<perl@geez.org> revised some Ethiopic glyphs. Ted Zlatanov
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<tzz@lifelogs.com> did some 7x14. Thanks also to everyone who
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contributed additions to the UTF-8 example texts and to Bruno Haible
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<haible@ilog.fr> for valuable comments.
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The creation of these fonts would certainly not have been possible
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without Mark Leisher's wonderful xmbdfed software.
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Markus
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--
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Markus G. Kuhn, Computer Laboratory, University of Cambridge, England
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