Font Full Unicode V8.4 By Ihit
A set of Fonts from SDL, IIT Madras --> --> Fonts (from IIT Madras) Search Fonts used in the IITM software The IITM Multilingual Editor The fundamental principle behind the design of the Multilingual software for Indian languages is the representation of text as 'aksharas' (syllables). This representation permits very efficient processing of text in all the Indian languages.
Section 6.23 Unicode Characters. PreTeXt supports (and encourages) the use of Unicode characters. Here are some relevant comments. Unicode characters will migrate well to any output format based on HTML.Most browsers will have a variety of fonts with glyphs to realize these characters.
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As a result of this design feature, the Multilingual Editor can handle a variety of fonts for displaying the text in each language/script. The files prepared using the IITM Editor or the related utilities will contain a font independent representation of the text (i.e., purely as aksharas).
The display of text is effected by using standard eight bit fonts for Indian scripts through script dependent lookup tables. This offers many advantages in practice since most systems handle eight bit fonts without difficulty. For text to displayed uniformly across computer systems, it is essential that the font rendering process be the same in all the systems. Unfortunately, the approach to handling fonts varies so much across systems that most of the fonts available (or used) for Indian languages work only on specific computers, usually under Microsoft Windows (/XP). Perhaps the term 'variety' is generic to india and is admirably well suited when it comes to dealing with the hundreds of fonts seen on the net, each requiring its own software or interface mechanism for data entry and display. IIT Madras has put together a set of fonts, one each for the eleven different scripts commonly used in the country. These have been selected from freely available (or distributed) fonts and in some cases, IIT Madras has provided her own fonts designed for multilingual use.
All these fonts have an important characteristic that they can be rendered properly on all computers using the native support provided in the respective Operating Systems. Each one of the fonts recommended by IIT Madras is ISO-8859-1 compatible in respect of Glyph locations. However, the version for a particular platform has been custom encoded to honor the 8859-1 arrangement. Hence the text will render properly on most systems either from local applications or web based applications including Java applets. Please note that mere compatibility with ISO-8859-1 does not guarantee proper rendering across different applications. The selection of glyphs has also been made on the basis of requirements relating to the proper display of as many samyuktakshars as possible, specifically for Sanskrit, Telugu, Malayalam and Oriya.
About the TrueType fonts The Truetype fonts are used on Microsoft Windows based systems and the set of fonts mentioned above is included in the package distributed by IIT Madras. Since the Editor and related utilities rely on an independent lookup table for displaying the aksharas for each script, a corresponding.tab file is included with each font for use with the Editor. Without the.tab file for each font, the editor will not be able to display the text. The.tab files carry the information to render each akshara and it is quite possible that we have not thoroughly checked out the correctness of the display of each of the more than 13000 aksharas.
From time to time. The.tab files may be updated. Please download the most recently updated.tab file for each script when you are downloading the fonts for use with the Editor (The.tab files are common to all platforms).
Fonts for use under Linux (BDF and PostScript) Fonts suited for use with XWindows under Unix (Linux) are provided in the BDF format (Bit mapped Format). BDF fonts will be correctly rendered on most Unix systems running XWindows. Being bit mapped, they are not amenable for scaling. Five font sizes are included in the distribution of each font. Each distribution also includes a fonts.dir file to help install the fonts under X11. Please note that the file name for the file in the archive may not be exactly fonts.dir but sans_fonts.dir tam_fonts.dir etc.