Royal Albert Hall, London, 6 August 2012 I have the pleasure to announce version 1.30MM of Polyglossia, that comes with experimental support for LuaTeX. Unfortunately I can't make an upload to CTAN at the moment because the two CTAN'ers are on holidays (can't blame them), but brave users can download the latest version of Polyglossia from my GitHub repository: http://gitub.com/reutenauer/polyglossia
It should be enough to just install polyglossia.sty and the gloss files in a local texmf tree, and I encourage users to experiment with it, and to report back to me or to one of the lists I'm emailing this message to; but please restrict your replies to one list only. I suggest lua...@tug.org as the most relevant place to conduct discussions. In fact, I would be glad if users could send me test documents for the languages they're using, as Polyglossia is rather lacking. The XeTeX list is also relevant, since adding LuaTeX support means I'm making heavy changes to polyglossia.sty; they shouldn't, however, affect the XeTeX side of things. But you never know. So again, please report any problem. As this is very much a work in progress, many languages still don't work at all with LuaTeX. I'm working on them, but at the moment any compilation will fail, so I wouldn't advise trying them. This includes -- but I'm afraid won't be limited to -- Arabic, Asturian, Catalan, French, Hebrew, Indonesian, Malaysian, Persian, Serbian, Turkish, Urdu, Vietnamese. And Indian languages won't work at all, as has been discussed on the XeTeX list. Unfortunately, there is no fix for that in the foreseeable future. There are different reasons why the aforementioned don't work at the moment, and I'm aware of them. Actually, setting the British variant of English won't work either (which is ironic, considering the location I send this announcement from, I know). Arthur -------------------------------------------------- Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex