On Wed, Aug 10, 2016 at 11:03 AM, Hans Hagen wrote: > On 8/9/2016 10:41 PM, Mohammad Hossein Bateni wrote: > >> Hello, >> >> I have a bunch of simple fonts for Arabic/Persian. These fonts lack >> Latin characters, etc., so I use fallbacks to work with them. >> >> I just noticed that \high does not work with them, and have not been >> able to pinpoint the issue. See the MWE below. >> >> >> \starttypescript [serif][samim][name] >> \definefontsynonym[Serif][Samim] >> \stoptypescript >> >> \definetypeface [myfont][rm] [serif][samim][default] >> \setupbodyfont [myfont] >> >> \starttext >> %\definedfont[Samim*arabic] >> ۱۲۳\high{۴}۵۶. >> \stoptext >> >> >> I am using Persian digits because the font lacks Latin digits as I >> mentioned. If I use the \definedfont approach, I don't see the >> character ۴ (argument of \high) at all. With the typescript approach, >> the same character /is/ typeset but is /not/ raised; it appears on the >> baseline but with smaller size. >> >> Any ideas why this is happening? Could it be that some parameters, for >> instance, \exheight are not properly set/read for this font? Actually, >> I looked at the non-math fontdimens in syst-fnt.mkiv, and everything >> except \slantperpoint (expected) and \exheight (awkward) is non-zero. I >> don't know where \exheight comes from—perhaps from the height of glyph >> for 'x', which the font lacks—however, \emheight is 12pt, although the >> font also lacks a glyph for 'm'. >> >> I am also attaching the font in case that helps. >> > > Normally one sets up a proper bodyfont (and environment if needed) while > you use just a simple font switch and that one is unrelated to any other > font setting. > Thanks! But what does a `proper' bodyfont contain beside defining rm, ss, tt and mm for 'myfont' above (with regular, bold, italic, and bolditalic)? The above was a MWE but in my real example I am setting up these things that I mentioned in a larger typescript. How can I modify the font or the typescript definitions (or the environment) to get \exheight right? > > I'll add two new commands: \sx and \sxx so that you can say: > > \setuplow [style=\sx] > \setuphigh[style=\sx] > If I do this, this will not get attached to the font; right? For instance, if I define two bodyfonts 'myfonta' and 'myfontb', and switch between them in the document, then I have to stick to these two setups if one font, say 'myfonta', is problematic. Is that correct? for such cases. However, as these are derived relative scales they are > normally not compatible with \tx and txx sizes. > > Hans > > ----------------------------------------------------------------- > Hans Hagen | PRAGMA ADE > Ridderstraat 27 | 8061 GH Hasselt | The Netherlands > tel: 038 477 53 69 | www.pragma-ade.nl | www.pragma-pod.nl > ----------------------------------------------------------------- > ____________________________________________________________ > _______________________ > If your question is of interest to others as well, please add an entry to > the Wiki! > > maillist : ntg-context@ntg.nl / http://www.ntg.nl/mailman/list > info/ntg-context > webpage : http://www.pragma-ade.nl / http://tex.aanhet.net > archive : http://foundry.supelec.fr/projects/contextrev/ > wiki : http://contextgarden.net > ____________________________________________________________ > _______________________