On Tue, Nov 03, 2009 at 08:14:10PM +0100, Boguslaw Jackowski wrote: > HO> Result: > HO> * lmtt misses > HO> * \textperthousand > HO> * \texttrademark > HO> * \textservicemark > > This is on purpose. Squashed (because of monospacing) glyphs do not fit > to the overall CM look-and-feel, moreover, the typesetting of trademark > and servicemark is trivial not only in TeX, but even in Word, and the > glyph perthousandzero (slot 24 in the Cork aka ec encoding) can be used > to obtain perthousand, permyriad, etc. > > >* qcr (tgcursor) misses > > * \textleftarrow > > * \textrightarrow > > * \textuparrow > > * \textdownarrow > > No, it didn't miss these glyphs -- they appeared as small, > irregularly shaped dots ;-)) > > Simply, a bug. Thanks for spotting it. Corrected, TG package > (on GUST website) updated an hour ago -- Staszek, what about > using the corrected package in TL2009? Thanks for fixing the bugs. Summary: the following fonts also have subencoding 0: * Latin Modern: lmdh, lmss, lmssq, lmvtt * TeX Gyre: qag, qbk, qcr, qcs, qpl, qtm, qzc, qhvc Open issue: lmtt misses \textperthousand, \texttrademark, \textservicemark I agree, they would look ugly squeezed into the width of the other glyphs. But what to do with textcomp's subencoding? * virtual font that provides the missing glyphs * new subencoding Frank? Yours sincerely Heiko <[log in to unmask]>