[Indic-computing-users] [LAP] font design references (fwd)
Status: Alpha
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From: Frederick N. <fr...@by...> - 2002-10-15 16:44:32
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From the LAP mailing list.... andLinuxLingam <lin...@bh...> ---------- Forwarded message ---------- excited about designing indian language fonts to help solve our culture's digital quagmire? . . .and win a font design contest or two as well? don't know where to start? behold! just found some urls scribbled on the back of palm leafs and mango leafs, from the forgotten chapters of panini's sutras. 1) unicode it! unicode is the best way to encode indian languages, and all languages of the world, past, present, future. www.unicode.org www.indlinux.org/links.php 2) opentype the file format. go beyond truetype or postscript font file formats, of the previous decade. boldly embrace the new opentype (*.otf) file format. one file format, for all operating systems and platforms, one single font file, and highly compact filesize. (what *.jpg is to image formats, *.otf is to type, without the copyrights and other issues.) www.opentype.org www.adobe.com/type/topics/main.html www.microsoft.com/typography/default.asp [the adobe site has a huge repository of pdf files that give you the lowdown and technical details of anything and everything to do with type. the ms site is also quite exhaustive. do check out the VOLT tool on its site] 3) qwerty does devanagri? how do i type devanagri or other indian language scripts, on the horrid qwerty keyboard? use the INSCRIPT keyboard layout. since all indian languages are similar, the INSCRIPT keyboard layout is universal for all our official languages. the idea is pretty simple: keep all the consonants on one side of the keyboard, and all the vowels on the other side. split a varg into two, and you've got the entire indian script on a 101-keys keyboard. www.indlinux.org/keymap/keymaps.php [search the web for more inscript stuff] 4) want a INSCRIPT keyboard tutor? this one works in dos. http://www.cdacindia.com/html/gist/down.asp 5) some amazing downloads on indian languages, as well as a good source of references and resource, by the Department of IT. technology development for indian languages (TDIL) http://tdil.mit.gov.in/ 6) okay, so you wanna whip those bezier curves into shape and design the font, character-by-character? you need pfaedit. this free and freedom-based software, published under the gpl license, is similar to fontographer, the commercial font design tool from macromedia. pfaedit has a graphic user interface, the provided documentation, tutorials, and reference material is excellent. read the fine manual. and get started. did i mention pfaedit works natively on linux, and needs another free software called cygwin to work under winXX? cygwin gives you a unix-like environment under win, including the Xwindows.... http://pfaedit.sourceforge.net/ http://cygwin.com [btw, pfaedit works under gnulinux, solaris, irix, freebsd, netbsd, macos/x, openVMS for alpha. u may also find some other tools mentioned on the ms and adobe site, but most of these are proprietory, commercial, and some not updated for quite some time] 7) what's gpl, in english? the gnu public license, that guarantees freedom in software. find out more about freedom-based software. www.gnu.org still need some more hand-holding? goto linux-delhi.org, subscribe to a mailing list, preferably the sc...@li... (for the moment) and tell us how deeply you searched for answers before posting your query (!). get inspired, create some indian language fonts under the gpl license. recite the lat lakaar of the font dhaatu: fonttii, fontta, fonttanti, fontsii, fontha, fontthhaa, fontaami, fontaava, fontaama. :-) LinuxLingam |