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author | Khaled Hosny <khaledhosny@eglug.org> | 2009-12-09 22:05:19 +0200 |
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committer | Khaled Hosny <khaledhosny@eglug.org> | 2009-12-09 22:05:19 +0200 |
commit | afd5090ce573c1d825966d7ce43f1912e9fa40f0 (patch) | |
tree | 0ba21efea7b341775c745c2436a3fa19e03dd572 | |
parent | e21315907f5f7095302352a46d0cef28e6db2a00 (diff) | |
download | luaotfload-afd5090ce573c1d825966d7ce43f1912e9fa40f0.tar.gz |
Cosmetics
-rw-r--r-- | luaotfload.dtx | 36 |
1 files changed, 19 insertions, 17 deletions
diff --git a/luaotfload.dtx b/luaotfload.dtx index 5288298..1c6188c 100644 --- a/luaotfload.dtx +++ b/luaotfload.dtx @@ -102,6 +102,8 @@ and the derived files \ProvidesFile{luaotfload.drv}% [2009/12/01 v1.06 ConTeXt font loading system]% \documentclass{ltxdoc} +\usepackage{metalogo} +\usepackage[colorlinks=true]{hyperref} \EnableCrossrefs \CodelineIndex \begin{document} @@ -138,7 +140,7 @@ and the derived files % % \begin{abstract} % Con\TeX t font loading system, providing the possibility to load OTF fonts -% with a lot of features, and the Xe\TeX\ font loading syntax. +% with a lot of features, and the \XeTeX\ font loading syntax. % \end{abstract} % % \tableofcontents @@ -155,9 +157,9 @@ and the derived files % of characters, and have some functionalities (ligatures, old-style numbers, % small capitals, etc.). They are everywhere, as the system fonts and most % modern text softwares fonts are of this type. Until now the (almost) only -% way to use them with \TeX\ was to use them with Xe\TeX . +% way to use them with \TeX\ was to use them with \XeTeX . % -% Unlike Xe\TeX , Lua\TeX\ does not provide facilities for these fonts by +% Unlike \XeTeX , Lua\TeX\ does not provide facilities for these fonts by % default, but it provides a way to hook lua code in some points of the \TeX\ % algorithm, for instance we can improve the font loading system; this is what % we do in this package. @@ -168,7 +170,7 @@ and the derived files % % \subsection{Loading fonts} % -% \textsf{luaotfload} supports Xe\TeX -like font syntax which looks like: +% \textsf{luaotfload} supports \XeTeX -like font syntax which looks like: % % \begin{center} % |\font\foo="|\meta{prefix}|:|\meta{font name}|:|\meta{font features}|"| \meta{\TeX\ font features} @@ -199,28 +201,28 @@ and the derived files % % By default \textsf{luaotfload} doesn't enable any font features, font features % must be explicitly enabled, |\font\foo=foo.ttf:+liga| will load |foo.ttf| font -% and enable |liga| feature. In the same way font features can be deactivated by -% prefixing it with minus sign; |\font\foo=foo.ttf:+liga;-liga| will load -% |foo.ttf| without any features enabled. +% and enable \texttt{liga} feature. In the same way font features can be +% deactivated by prefixing it with minus sign; |\font\foo=foo.ttf:+liga;-liga| +% will load \texttt{foo.ttf} without any features enabled. % % \paragraph{Modes} -% \textsf{luaotfload} has two OpenType processing modes; |base| mode which -% enables only a subset of OpenType features and works by mapping those features -% to traditional TeX ligaturing and kerning mechanisms and is a bit faster, and -% |node| mode which, hopefully, supports OpenType fully and works by direct -% processing of node list at lua end and is a bit slower. +% \textsf{luaotfload} has two OpenType processing modes; \texttt{base} mode +% which enables only a subset of OpenType features and works by mapping those +% features to traditional TeX ligaturing and kerning mechanisms and is a bit +% faster, and \texttt{node} mode which, hopefully, supports OpenType fully and +% works by direct processing of node list at lua end and is a bit slower. % -% Modes can be selected using |mode| keyword and it must come before any other -% font feature, e.g. |\font\foo=foo.ttf:mode=node;+liga|. +% Modes can be selected using \texttt{mode} keyword and it must come before any +% other font feature, e.g. |\font\foo=foo.ttf:mode=node;+liga|. % % \paragraph{Additional font features} % \textsf{luaotfload} defines some additional font feature not defined in % OpenType, currently three features are defined: % % \begin{itemize} -% \item[-] |anum| Arabic numbers -% \item[-] |tlig| \TeX\ ligatures -% \item[-] |trep| \TeX\ replacements +% \item[-] \texttt{anum} Arabic numbers +% \item[-] \texttt{tlig} \TeX\ ligatures +% \item[-] \texttt{trep} \TeX\ replacements % \end{itemize} % % \subsubsection{Examples} |