Mike Maxwell wrote:
Maybe: books which need to be nicely typeset (probably not your average
paperback), pamphlets, some kinds of technical articles (particularly
math), multilingual documents where at least one of the languages uses a
complex script, dictionaries.
All of the above: also, anyone who needs support for OpenType, AAT, or
Graphite features. This includes quality typesetting, but also scholarship
in some fields, not only those that use complex scripts. Epigraphers and
papyrologists, for instance, need access to glyph variants which are best
handled with OT stylistic alternates or character variants, since Unicode
will encode only one generic form of a character, not all the variants.
David
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