[XeTeX] Coloured fonts
Jonathan Kew
jfkthame at gmail.com
Fri Mar 19 01:55:36 CET 2021
On 18/03/2021 23:50, Paul A. Norman wrote:
> If a pdf (pre)viewer component is not coded to do it by itself, the
> underlying operating system may be called to do the rendering.
>
> As per link in Ross More's posting, that may mean sometimes that a
> minimum of:
> macOS 10.14+, iOS 12+, Windows 10+
> – is required.
>
> It's one thing to get it showing in a pdf, it's quite another sometimes
> to get it into print ...
>
> "OpenType SVG Fonts in Print: Known Issues and Recommendations
> by Laura Baker
>
> "OpenType SVG (scalable vector graphics) fonts are nothing new.
> Initially intended for web-based design, OpenType SVG fonts are
> beginning to appear in printed works and are causing concern in the
> printing industry among designers, publishers, printers, and software
> companies alike.
> ..."
It's perhaps worth pointing out, though, that the colour font Philip is
trying to use is *not* an OpenType-SVG font; it's a layered colour font
using the Microsoft-originated COLR and CPAL tables. This is a quite
different technology, and tools/documentation regarding the SVG table
are not relevant to it.
JK
>
> Here's a workout for anyone interested, as it also has tools for
> outputting the SVG table and so for inspection of the colour 'glyphs'
> directly if necessary for some fonts ...
>
> "Tools and sample files for making OpenType-SVG fonts"
>
> MIT License
>
> addsvg – adds an SVG table to a font, using SVG files provided. The
> font's format can be either OpenType or TrueType.
>
> dumpsvg – saves the contents of a font's SVG table as individual SVG
> files. The font's format can be either OpenType, TrueType, WOFF, or WOFF2.
>
> fonts2svg – generates a set of SVG glyph files from one or more fonts
> and hex colors for each of them. The fonts' format can be either
> OpenType, TrueType, WOFF, or WOFF2.
>
> With process instructions under —
>
> "How to make OpenType-SVG fonts?"
>
> https://github.com/adobe-type-tools/opentype-svg
> <https://github.com/adobe-type-tools/opentype-svg>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> http://PaulANorman.info <http://PaulANorman.info>
>
>
> On March 19, 2021 10:44:57 AM GMT+13:00, Philip Taylor
> <P.Taylor at Hellenic-Institute.Uk> wrote:
>
> David Carlisle wrote:
>
>> I see colour here in windows firefox, widows chrome and xpdf
>> using cygwin X
>>
>> attached luahbtex file and result
>>
>> in Chrome it looks like this
>>
>> image.png
>>
>>
>
> OK, so it could be the TeXworks previewer that is failing to shew
> the colour. But to get your plain LuaTeX code to work, and not
> report a missing font, I had to remove the ".ttf" extension :
>
> % !TeX Program=LuaTeX
>
> \magnification 900
>
> \input luaotfload.sty
>
> \font \bodyfont = "Minion Pro"
> \font \tenit = "MinionPro-IT"
> \font \smallcaps = "Minion Pro/ICU:+smcp"
> \font \oldstyle = "Minion Pro/ICU:+onum"
> \relax
> \font \pieces = "BabelStoneXiangqiColour:mode=harf"
> \relax
> \pagewidth = 35 true pc
> \pageheight = 59 true pc
> \hsize = 25 true pc
> \advance \hoffset by -1 true in
> \advance \voffset by -1 true in
> \advance \hoffset by 5 pc
> \advance \voffset by 13 true pc
> \pretolerance = 9999
> \spaceskip = 0,333 em plus 0,3 em minus 0,1 em
> \xspaceskip = 1 em plus 0,3 em minus 0,1 em
> \def \lineturn {\unskip {\parfillskip = 0 pt \endgraf
> \noindent}\ignorespaces}
> \def \ignore #1{}
> \catcode `\“ = \active
> \catcode `\” = \active
> \catcode `\; = \active
> \catcode `\: = \active
> \def \Prespace #1{\def #1{$\;$\char `#1\relax}}
> \def \prespace #1{\def #1{$\,$\char `#1\relax}}
> \def \postspace #1{\def #1{\char `#1\relax $\,$}}
> \prespace ”
> \Prespace ;
> \Prespace :
> \postspace “
> \bodyfont
> \parskip = 0 pt
>
> % snip
>
> \pieces
> \centerline {\char "1FA60\relax}
> \centerline {🩠}
>
> \end
>
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