Hi everyone, a while back I wanted to create a font so I could use my self-invented script on a computer as well.
So far I have been using FontForge because it's free but a couple months back I ran into some problems with ligatures.
After following the instructions from design with FontForge and some other tutorials I have found online I got them working inside of FontForge. So when I type the components of a ligature in the metrics window, they get replaced by the proper ligature. But the problem is that I'm unable to get the ligatures working in LibreOffice after exporting the font as an OpenType font. So my first idea was to check if LibreOffice actually supports OpenType. I then installed the latest version that can definitely use OpenType features. After that I tested my font again, but still my ligatures weren't used. Has somebody got an idea what could be wrong?
Something not closely related:
I read that a new font design software called TruFont is in development. Would switching solve the problem with ligatures? Also, would switching be beneficial in general?
Thank you for your answers in advance.
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And while Trufont is promising, it still has a long way to go before it can do many of the things we expect in a font editor. Development seems to have stalled without a single commit to Github (at least publicly) in almost two months.
ligatures are a default-on tag, so they work without it specially enabled. I also tested it with some fonts that were preinstalled and there ligatures worked, also without the tag specifically set.
@AbrahamLee if I try to attach the font files, it says: File is not allowed.
I've compressed them as a tar.gz archive to be able to attach them here.
Incidentally, when I open the OTF in FF, I do see the Ligature lookup there, but I think something got jumbled because the subtable name isn't remotely close to the one in the SFD file. You'll probably want to change the name to 'liga' since that's the standard ligature subtable name.