Hello Enrico, On 20/06/2011, at 5:42 AM, enrico.grego...@univr.it wrote:
> What the OP wants is that "CXV" is stored as a unique glyph representing 115. > Maybe this can be done by reserving, say, five thousand slots in Unicode to > contain the numbers from 1 to 5000 in Roman form that are built from the basic > digits, embedding in the font (or in the typesetting engine) the algorithm > for building > them from the Western/Arabic representation. No. In the PDF ISO standard, you have the option of using /ActualText tagging. The PDF would contain a portion of the page contents stream, such as: /Span<</ActualText(115)>>BMC .... (graphics to position and produce the letters 'C' 'X' and 'V' ) ... EMC Now *any* attempt to select any portion of the visible string "CXV" is supposed to result in the whole string being included when copying. The problem is that not all PDF browsers are fully conformant, so this behaviour may not be what you actually get with a particular piece of software. (BTW, Apple is one of the biggest offenders.) > This might be done in two passes: > represent the number using the codes for Roman numerals and start a ligaturing > process. Trying to do it character by character at the font level doesn't seem overly practical to me. The concept is the number "123" but represented in a non-standard way. The use of /ActualText tagging seems to be much more helpful to readers, and also to other software that tries to extract the meaning being represented with a PDF, for whatever purpose. Note that ISO PDF also has an alternative method of tagging. E.g. /Span<</Alt(123)>>BMC .... EMC Screen-readng software is meant to use the /Alt tagging. And both /Alt and /ActualText allow multiple values having been preceded by a /Lang tag, so that the actual vocalization generated by the screen-reader can be adjusted for different languages --- the document author normally would provide this, but a sophisticated PDF browser plug-in might be programmed to produce a translation on-the-fly. > > Actually, Roman numerals are mostly used when the numerical information is > almost irrelevant as such. Nobody uses the "XIV" in "Louis XIV" to perform > calculations. That's just a different way of writing "quatorze". Right. So /ActualText tagging can support this distinction in meaning. It is *not* intended to support calculations --- that is the domain of "Content Tagging" using MathML. > > I see it just as the ability to copy "quatorze" from a text and paste it into > a > worksheet cell accepting numbers to get 14. In the case of Roman numerals > it may be simpler, of course. But is it useful? Most certainly it is useful. It is part of the way of the future for smart PDF documents. > > Ciao > Enrico ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Ross Moore ross.mo...@mq.edu.au Mathematics Department office: E7A-419 Macquarie University tel: +61 (0)2 9850 8955 Sydney, Australia 2109 fax: +61 (0)2 9850 8114 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -------------------------------------------------- Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex