On Thu, Jun 16, 2011 at 11:43:28AM -0700, Bakul Shah wrote: > > Modifying TeX to accept utf as input (I mean the compiler/interpreter by > > itself; not macros), converting to rune and then using 16 bits à la math > > mode to switch inside a font family to the "correct" 256 vector is > > something that, for a first step, seems to me both reasonable and > > simple. > > What about XeTeX? It is a merge of TeX with Unicode and > modern font tech. Works with OpenType Fonts.
I will give it a look. The decision will depend on: 1) The licence: if it is GPL, I will not touch it even with a long spoon... 2) If the core modifications are separated enough from the kpathsea and so on dance. 3) The nature of the solution. There is another program I have to give it a look: John Hobby has given me the information about an evolution of his MetaPost. It is original AT&T and LGPL, so for the licence it's OK. For the modifications, I will have to look. So just to say that I'm not discarding existing solutions by principle. If XeTeX does answer correctly---to my taste---to the problem, why not? But since there is now almost only the lost needle in kerTeX, I will not add back hay. And just for the record once more: LaTeX can work with kerTeX; so even the unicode.sty hack Russ Cox wrote about can work with kerTeX. User has all the rope he can dream of... -- Thierry Laronde <tlaronde +AT+ polynum +dot+ com> http://www.kergis.com/ Key fingerprint = 0FF7 E906 FBAF FE95 FD89 250D 52B1 AE95 6006 F40C