Le vendredi 02 juillet 2010 à 15:48 -0400, Máirín Duffy a écrit : > accents seem to work. > > If I write 'Máirín' in MgOpen Modata, the á and í print out, but not in > the MgOpen Modata letterforms. Instead the font system falls back to > DejaVu (I believe, could be another fallback font but looks like DejaVu > to me). You can easily test the language coverage of a font file using the command: FC_DEBUG=256 fc-query <filename> It will print all sorts of information, including a list of ISO 639 language codes followed by the number of associated missing codepoints in the font file. For example: aa(10) ab(90) af(17) ak(21) am(264) an(14) ar(36) as(64) ast(14) av(67) ay(8) { 00c4 00cf 00d1 00dc 00e4 00ef 00f1 00fc } az-az(14) az-ir(40) ba(82) be(68) ber-dz(18) ber-ma(32) bg(60) … de(7) { 00c4 00d6 00dc 00df 00e4 00f6 00fc } dv(49) dz(95) ee(47) el(0) en(20) eo(12) es(14) et(12) … If the number is zero (el(0)) the font file contains all the bits needed to write the associated language (Greek, not surprizing since Modata is a Greek font), if it is non-zero it is missing this number of codepoints, if it is non-zero and less than ten fc-query will print the list of missing codepoints after the language number : ay(8) { 00c4 00cf 00d1 00dc 00e4 00ef 00f1 00fc } Of course just because a font includes support for lots of codepoints does not mean they are all well designed. So it's just a minimal test. Also don't test just the Normal font, the coverage of Bold/Italic/etc can ans is often different. As for Modata, ga(28) means it sucks for Gaelic (Irish) Regards, -- Nicolas Mailhot _______________________________________________ design-team mailing list design-team@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/design-team