Consider the following code :
\font \greekfont = "Palatino Linotype"
\greekfont
U+1F7D : GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH OXIA — ώ \par
U+03CE : GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH TONOS — ώ \par
\end
The final (Greek) character on each of the two key lines is the character
described by the preceding te
Am Sun, 13 Nov 2022 09:58:28 + schrieb Philip Taylor (RHBNC):
> Consider the following code :
>
> \font \greekfont = "Palatino Linotype" \greekfont U+1F7D : GREEK
> SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH OXIA — ώ \par U+03CE : GREEK SMALL LETTER
> OMEGA WITH TONOS — ώ \par \end
>
> The final (Greek) char
On 13/11/2022 10:34, Ulrike Fischer wrote:
It is the font. With arial I get two different glyphs.
Facinating — so do I (see below). Thank you Ulrike — much appreciated.
And in the lua-file of pala.ttf one can find the glyphs in the duplicates
table:
["duplicates"]={
...
[974]={