Gerriet, what I noticed at the time of writing those methods was that there was
no predefined way to create superscripted text for NSAttributedText.
What my premise was to simulate/create superscripted text was to raise the
baseline a % of the text's font size and reduce the font size used for t
> On 15 Oct 2015, at 00:03, David Duncan wrote:
>
>
>> On Oct 14, 2015, at 4:02 AM, Gerriet M. Denkmann
>> wrote:
>>
>> I put into some iOS 9 app (Xcode 7.0) 4 UILabels.
>> All have Clip Subviews = off, font size 96 with a coloured background, text
>> plain = “ฟี้กุฎุมพี”.
>>
>> The diffe
NSAttributedText works really nice with these.
I'll send you some material on that.
On Oct 14, 2015, at 7:02 AM, Gerriet M. Denkmann wrote:
> I put into some iOS 9 app (Xcode 7.0) 4 UILabels.
> All have Clip Subviews = off, font size 96 with a coloured background, text
> plain = “ฟี้กุฎุมพี”.
> On Oct 14, 2015, at 4:02 AM, Gerriet M. Denkmann wrote:
>
> I put into some iOS 9 app (Xcode 7.0) 4 UILabels.
> All have Clip Subviews = off, font size 96 with a coloured background, text
> plain = “ฟี้กุฎุมพี”.
>
> The difference is the font:
>
> System: ok (but is too bold for my taste)
I put into some iOS 9 app (Xcode 7.0) 4 UILabels.
All have Clip Subviews = off, font size 96 with a coloured background, text
plain = “ฟี้กุฎุมพี”.
The difference is the font:
System: ok (but is too bold for my taste)
Thonburi and Thonburi Light: bottom get cut off
System Light: bottom gets cu