Am Montag, 29. November 2010, um 12:50:01 schrieb Florian Wobbe: > On Nov 29, 2010, at 12:40 , Ch. B. wrote: > > Am Montag, 29. November 2010, um 09:17:10 schrieb Florian Wobbe: > >> On Nov 29, 2010, at 00:29 , ... wrote: > >>> Good evening! > >>> > >>> First of all, I'm new to this list and also a context/luatex newbe. I > >>> have some experience with LaTeX. > >>> I want to use a font (Neutraface2) in my documents and I'm struggeling > >>> with the typescript. I'm not able to get bold SmallCaps working (the > >>> bold face .otf file has the feature smcp, I checked). > >>> I tried various combinations and variations of \bf \sc in my document. > >>> It gives me bold OR smallcaps, but not bold AND smallcaps. Whats wrong > >>> here? Can someone give me an example typescript that I could modify to > >>> fit the Neutraface2 font? My attempt to make one is attached. > >>> > >>> Greetings, > >>> Chris > >> > >> Hi Chris, > >> > >> it does not work for pagella either. Did you try \setff{smallcaps} \bf > >> instead? > >> > >> \usetypescript[pagella] > >> \setupbodyfont[pagella] > >> > >> \starttext > >> {\setff{smallcaps} This is in {\bf bold} SmallCaps} (works). > >> {\sc This is in {\bf bold} SmallCaps} (does not). > >> \stoptext > >> > >> Florian > > > > Hi Florian, > > > > that does work, thank you very much. > > I assume the \setff means something like set font feature. If so, I > > could shorten my typescript and only specify the 4 main font faces > > (regular, bold italic, bold-italic) since the fonts all have all the > > opentype features i need (onum & smcp etc.) And these can be accessed > > via \setff{feature}, I guess. > > Yes, you can define for instance > > \definefontfeature[dlig][default][dlig=yes] % Discretionary Ligatures: > Activates uncommon ligatures > \definefontfeature[frac][default][frac=yes,numr=yes] % Fractions e.g. 3/4 > \definefontfeature[sups][default][sups=yes] % Superscript > \definefontfeature[subs][default][subs=yes] % Subscript > > and access the font features with \setff{dlig}, \setff{subs} etc. > > Florian Wonderfull! I'm starting to get the hang of it. Even the stylistic sets work like a charm. I've attached the output file in case you want to have a look at what I'm doing here. Now one last question would be: How can I insert a certain character with its opentype name? For example \insertopentypecharacter{f_f_h.alt}. That would be cool because otfinfo -g shows all the glyph names and one must not fiddle arount with hex numbers or char-stuff. In XeTeX it is possible to do so with \XeTeXglyph\XeTeXglyphindex"Q.alt1" (or Q.alt2). That would access the first (or second) alternate glyph for the letter Q. You really helped a lot here. Thank you! Chris