Am 23.10.2010 um 17:30 schrieb Ulrike Fischer:

Am Sat, 23 Oct 2010 11:27:46 +0200 schrieb Peter Dyballa:


1. Is it possible to replace unicode by applemac encoding? What are
the commands in this case?

If you want to continue typing in applemac input encoding you better
stay with the much more developed pdfTeX.  All packages work with
pdfTeX, and additionally you gain micro-typography. And: you can also
continue to use PostScript fonts.

Why shouldn't someone be forced to use utf8 encoding if its texts
use only chars from a 8bit codepage?

This question is not clear to me (should someone /be/ forced or /not be/ forced?), so I just remark that it's some over-kill.

Xetex is quite able to handle them if you declare the encoding.

Hopefully... And it's not clear which input encodings are really supported by XeTeX and do work. And how do you seduce XeTeX to output all auxiliary files in this non-UTF-8 encoding?

Also why is pdftex "more devoloped"?

Version number, age, number of developers involved, code review, almost bug-free...

Because it doesn't offer Open Type support?

No. This "support" simply is not needed. You can use lean fonts with pdfTeX and the packages perform what the faulty tables of an OTF font don't always deliver. It's left to the author to implement more fancy tricks.

And it is new to me that "all packages work with pdftex", fontspec e.g.
doesn't do it.

No, it does! To me it tells that I need to use XeTeX. Are you using an elderly version of fontspec v.2?

Also XeTeX has no problems to use Postscript fonts either.

I make my CD and DVD covers this way... And here lies the advantage of XeTeX: it can use arbitrary fonts, fonts with a particular look&feel, without need to create and install the plethora of pdfTeX font support files. (For simplistic things PostScript fonts really are OK XeTeX. For creating something more elaborate it's better to use an evolved font format.)

But you are right: pdftex has better microtypography support.


A PostScript font is for XeTeX or LuaTeX as useful as a
French car without gas for its owner or user.

Well I'm using a lot of postscript fonts with xetex and luatex, e.g.
to print chessboards and chess games and find them very useful.


This is so easy work, that you could use MS Word...

--
Mit friedvollen Grüßen

  Pete

Perl—the only language that looks the same before and after RSA encryption.
                                - Keith Bostic




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