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- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!news.service.uci.edu!unogate!mvb.saic.com!info-tex
- From: mackay@cs.washington.edu (Pierre MacKay)
- Newsgroups: comp.text.tex
- Subject: Inputting accented characters (postpositive accents)
- Message-ID: <9301220155.AA09646@june.cs.washington.edu>
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 93 17:55:36 -0800
- Organization: Info-Tex<==>Comp.Text.Tex Gateway
- X-Gateway-Source-Info: Mailing List
- Lines: 50
-
-
- > First of all, the TeX3 parameters \lefthyphenmin and \righthyphenmin are
- > spoilt by ligatures (a single accented letter to be cut of...arghhhh).
-
- Well, I'll have to push on OTEP Turkish a little harder to see if I can
- make it happen. It hasn't happened yet.
-
- Wait a minute!! There is no reason why it should ever happen. The
- {\it relatively} few patterns with a boundary character on one side and a
- trigraph in the middle can be protected in the hyphenation file. Now
- that I think of it, that is what I do. I haven't done much with the
- kerning problem yet because kerning tables are such a time-consuming
- bore, but I think I am getting distinct kernings for some accented
- Greek characters. I'll have to check with dvitype to see if it is
- really happening.
-
- > The best way of inputting accented letters is direct input of the right
- > code and to have them ready in a font. The Cork encoded dc-font allow this.
-
- That's like the advice I was given to switch to UNICODE at once. But
- in what editor? I kind of like dear old emacs which I can run on
- dozens of different terminals without getting tied in knots by the
- requirements of proprietary software, single-purpose graphics display
- hardware and expensive proprietary fonts. When something like
- Howard Gayle's ropes and glyphs are built into general versions
- of Emacs I will use them with delight, but I know that I and my
- impoverished colleagues haven't a hope of coming near useful
- 16-bit wide character software in the foreseeable future.
-
- > Second best is accessing them via macros or active characters, like many
- > national styles do. This approach is also adopted by the Babel system of.
-
- OK, but that still leaves the question, in what editor? Which
- return to my main point. The relation between keystrokes and
- input codes to TeX is the province of an editor, not of TeX.
-
- I may be the only user of multi-lingual text who is constantly forced
- to migrate among hardware platforms of differing capabilities, but
- I rather doubt it. The availability of digraph and trigraph
- conventions has solved several other communications problems for
- us.
-
- Email concerned with UnixTeX distribution software should be sent primarily
- to: elisabet@max.u.washington.edu Elizabeth Tachikawa
- otherwise to: mackay@cs.washington.edu Pierre A. MacKay
- Smail: Northwest Computing Support Center Resident Druid for
- Thomson Hall, Mail Stop DR-10 Unix-flavored TeX
- University of Washington
- Seattle, WA 98195
- (206) 543-6259
-