I'm afraid the hyphenation rot had set in well before 1996.  Any publisher that 
can list bio|graph|ic|al and biog|raphy in adjacent entries to its published 
dictionary of hyphenation points (The Oxford Colour Spelling Dictionary) 
clearly needs to be treated with caution on such matters!   (The second two in 
'biographical' are marked as less preferable, and I used to dream of a system 
which would allow ranking of hyphenation points, though it's a pretty immense 
task; the solitary one in biography' is surely unacceptable.)

The old conventions as delineated in the latest editions of Hart were much 
safer, allowing much less less leeway for inflexional breaks and for the 'feel' 
of how words are pronounced nowadays (or however they would like to express it) 
and sticking to a finite number of quite easily grasped rules that had 
essentially been in place since the inception of type and (in view of the 
prevalence of classical learning at that time) are recognizable adaptations of 
Latin/Greek rules (essentially: take over a single consonant, split a group of 
consonants, though it isn't that straightforward of course).

John
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Dominik Wujastyk 
  To: Unicode-based TeX for Mac OS X and other platforms 
  Sent: 23 October 2010 17:51
  Subject: Re: [XeTeX] (Xe)LaTeX output in a non-(Xe)LaTeX scholarly community


  On 23 October 2010 16:20, John Was <john....@ntlworld.com> wrote:


    [...]

    Getting back to TeX-related matters, the hyphenation patterns available in 
XeTeX (even to 'plain' users like myself) are an enormous help, even if I 
disagree with the English at frequent points 

    [...]


  Phil Taylor, Graham Toal, and I were involved in making the British English 
hyphenation patterns for TeX.  They were based on a really good tape of 
UK-English-hyphenated words supplied to me by OUP themselves in 1996 (with full 
permissions to release the results to the TeX community).  When you say you 
disagree with the English break points quite often, are you using the US or the 
UK patterns?  They're very, very different.  

  It's hard to get good public info on British English hyphenation.  American 
dictionaries routinely include hyphenation points, but British one's routinely 
don't. The OUP tape was a godsend.

  Dominik




------------------------------------------------------------------------------




  --------------------------------------------------
  Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.:
    http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex

--------------------------------------------------
Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.:
  http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex

Reply via email to