David Tolpin wrote:
> Because the typesetter does not input XSL. XSL is an internal
> interchange format produced by one program and consumed by
> another one. Instrument the program the typesetter works with
> with sufficient controls and transform fixed spaces into the
> presentation layer's elements.
>
> There are no fixed spaces in fonts.
Sure there are. For example, take a look at Arial Unicode MS, which has
a full range of fixed spaces. Also, if you use a font that does not have
a fixed space at the respective Unicode point you usually use Arial
Unicode MS as a fallback font that takes care of the fixed space.
Best regards,
Mats Broberg
Technical Documentation Manager
www.flirthermography.com
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Received on Wed Oct 19 06:01:24 2005
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Wed Oct 19 2005 - 06:01:29 PDT