With an emphasis on ‹there›. It works in Paradox because of a trick – visual ambiguity. It is somewhere between curly and flat (like a serif). Whether it is considered as a curl or as a serif is left… (View Post)
If regular and italic glyphs are included in the same font, then you are able to kern them against each other. This is what I did in Litteratra where regular lowercase and italic lowercase share the … (View Post)
Off topic, given the thread's title, yet it needs to be pointed out that the remark "RoboFont is more of a platform than an out-of-the-box tool" is a myth at best. RoboFont is an out-of-the… (View Post)
SIL's document is clear about its objective – and its limitation. Section ‹Internal font line spacing settings› refers to another approach, then correctly acknowledges that ‹there is no good solution… (View Post)
The point of SIL's approach is that all three sets are identical in terms of values so that it does not make a difference which of these sets an application chooses. They are identical after all. He… (View Post)