From: Peter Dyballa <Peter_Dyballa@Web.DE>
To: zaher14@gmail.com
Cc: help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org
Subject: Re: Bengali Rendering in Emacs 23
Date: Tue, 18 Aug 2009 11:24:41 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <90F49B4A-786B-4ECA-A50F-C1EB33976806@Web.DE> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <86vdklin6d.fsf@betla.izb.knu.ac.kr>
> Abu Zaher <zaher14@gmail.com> writes:
>
>> Hi,I'm using Ubuntu 9.04, and running emacs-snapshot 20090320.
>> I see that while it can render Bengali characters, it can't
>> render them in correct order. for eg কো is being rendered as
>> কো whereas কী is rendering fine. Am I missing any
>> configurations? I suppose there are some rendering issues with
>> Bengali in Emacs, am I right?
Of course! A few oriental scripts change the shape of glyphs when
they become neighbours of particular characters. An evolved text
processor (for example XeTeX or the Mellel application for Mac OS X,
Yudit for Linux) takes from an OpenType font (OTF) information about
this. GNU Emacs can partially deliver the same performance by using
Pango and lib17n *with* OTF fonts, for which to open GNU Emacs needs
to be configured and built with libotf. So it's up to you to install
useful Bengali OT fonts on your system.
And of course you can check whether other applications on your Ubuntu
system perform the task correctly. When they do and GNU Emacs fails,
then the customisation in your or the system's init files can be the
cause. To prevent their interference you can launch GNU Emacs with
the -Q option.
--
Greetings
Pete
(This space left blank for technical reasons.)
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2009-08-18 9:24 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 5+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
[not found] <mailman.4827.1250555929.2239.help-gnu-emacs@gnu.org>
2009-08-18 7:41 ` Bengali Rendering in Emacs 23 Byung-Hee HWANG
2009-08-18 9:24 ` Peter Dyballa [this message]
2009-08-19 4:01 ` Jason Rumney
2009-08-19 6:32 ` Abu Zaher
2009-08-17 17:32 Abu Zaher
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