> Probably the encoding. Open up the font in FontForge and you can both see > how the font is encoded and change its encoding to "unicode" (actually > 10646). The way fontconfig works under Linux is like linking of an > executable through ld. The first font that provides the requested range gets > to provide the glyph, otherwise it falls back to the next font, and so on. > So in your case I guess that the Rashi font did not provide the code points > for the Hebrew glyphs in the right positions, so it fell through to the next > font that fontconfig is configured to use. >
How does one configure the order of the fallback fonts? -- Dotan Cohen http://bido.com http://what-is-what.com Please CC me if you want to be sure that I read your message. I do not read all list mail. _______________________________________________ Linux-il mailing list Linux-il@cs.huji.ac.il http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il