Thanks for the info.
Will something break up, when using
\newunicodechar{<U+2009>}{\,\hspace{0pt}}
\newunicodechar{<U+202F>}{\,}
in the preamble? Or does some important or highly used package use these
characters specifically?
ciao
Toscho
Am 02.03.2011 22:07, schrieb enrico.grego...@univr.it:
Tobias Schoel wrote:
So would it be wise to make for example u2009 (narrow space) and u202f
(narrow no break space) active and map it to {\,} or {\nolinebreak\,}
respectively?
ciao
Toscho
Am 22.02.2011 23:00, schrieb enrico.grego...@univr.it:
[...]
See my message<http://tug.org/pipermail/xetex/2011-
February/020100.html>> concerning U+00A0 (NO BREAK SPACE).
In (Xe)LaTeX, \, inserts a kern and TeX won't break a line at a kern unless
it's followed by glue (a normal space, usually). Thus you can get what you
want by
\newunicodechar{<U+2009>}{\,\hspace{0pt}}
\newunicodechar{<U+202F>}{\,}
(with the real characters, of course). The newunicodechar package was
designed primarily in order to free the user from the need to consult long
code pages. Maybe I'll add the possibility to specify a character by code
point (in XeLaTeX, as with LaTeX there's already \DeclareUnicodeCharacter).
Ciao
Enrico
--
Enrico Gregorio + Dipartimento di Informatica + Tel: +39 045
8027937
enrico.grego...@univr.it + Università degli Studi di Verona +
(grego...@math.unipd.it) + Strada le Grazie 15 / I-37134 Verona + Fax: +39 045
8027928
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