Exploring Python for next desktop GUI Project
wxjmfauth at gmail.com
wxjmfauth at gmail.com
Sat Jul 26 03:48:08 EDT 2014
Le vendredi 25 juillet 2014 01:25:55 UTC+2, Terry Reedy a écrit :
[...]
>
>
>
> 'any language' requires a nearly complete unicode font.
[...]
Not really.
A positive consequence of unicode is certainly to
be found in the font technology.
For plenty of reasons, fonts are becoming specialized
and luckily these specialization features are embeded in
the fonts.
The fonts may also satisfy a standard: pan-european,
MES-N, ...
D:\jm>otfinfo.exe -s c:\windows\fonts\consola.ttf
cyrl Cyrillic
cyrl.SRB Cyrillic/Serbian
grek Greek
latn Latin
latn.IPPH Latin/Phonetic transcription--IPA conventions
latn.ROM Latin/Romanian
latn.TRK Latin/Turkish
D:\jm>otfinfo.exe -s d:\jm\BundesSans-Regular.otf
DFLT Default
cyrl Cyrillic
grek Greek
latn Latin
latn.AZE Latin/Azeri
latn.CRT Latin/Crimean Tatar
latn.MOL Latin/Moldavian
latn.ROM Latin/Romanian
latn.TRK Latin/Turkish
To my knowledge, the most complete font:
(Usable to display code points/glyphs, not usable to work
with.)
D:\jm>otfinfo.exe -s c:\windows\fonts\ARIALUNI.ttf
arab Arabic
arab.FAR Arabic/Farsi
arab.URD Arabic/Urdu
deva Devanagari
gujr Gujarati
guru Gurmukhi
hani CJK Ideographic
hani.JAN CJK Ideographic/Japanese
hani.KOR CJK Ideographic/Korean
hani.ZHS CJK Ideographic/Chinese Simplified
hani.ZHT CJK Ideographic/Chinese Traditional
kana Hiragana/Katakana
kana.JAN Hiragana/Katakana/Japanese
knda Kannada
taml Tamiljmf
jmf
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