Hi. Does anyone out there know of a way to do 2 versions of a letter in the same font (like the letter r for the middle of words and a different looking r for the end of a word)?
Whether this can be done and to what extent depends upon which software package or packages are used to produce the font, and upon the operating system of the computer.
Excellent results can be obtained by producing an OpenType font and using an application software package such as Adobe InDesign. However, InDesign is an expensive package. I do not have it. FontCreator does not at the time of writing this note support OpenType font production directly, though a font made using FontCreator can be converted to OpenType to some extent using some other software.
However, using FontCreator to produce a TrueType font and then using the font with Microsoft WordPad can produce good results for display and printing: the problem is that the text will not be transferable to other users in a standard format, though it can be transferable with a private arrangement as to the meanings of the characters.
I have created the 2 versions of the letter r, but don’t know how to get the keyboard to recognize the 2 styles and when to use them?
Some time ago I produced a font named Sonnet to a Renaissance Lady where I have several versions of a lowercase g.
The font has its own thread in the Gallery forum of this webspace.
http://forum.high-logic.com:9080/t/sonnet-to-a-renaissance-lady/1403/1
The direct download link for the font is as follows.
http://www.users.globalnet.co.uk/~ngo/SONNETRL.TTF
An interesting learning experiment is to install the font, then open WordPad and then copy and paste the following two lines of text into WordPad and then reformat so that the Sonnet to a Renaissance Lady font is being used at 24 point.
Spring Fashion Show
Sprin Fashion Show
The question is now as to where the swash tailed g is stored in the font.
In fact, it is stored in a cell mapped to U+E424 in the Unicode Private Use Area. The choice of U+E424 rather than some other place within the Unicode Private Use Area was made by me. Anyone is entitled to make such an allocation within the Unicode Private Use Area.
In order to insert the character into WordPad one needs the Alt code. The E424 in U+E424 is a hexadecimal number. It can be converted to a decimal value. Microsoft Calculator in View Scientific mode is good for doing that. The answer is 58404. So, entering the character into WordPad is by holding down the Alt key, keying 58404 on the number keys that are at the right of the keyboard and then releasing the Alt key.
In fact, the font has several versions of lowercase g. One, the simplest design, is at the normal place for g. The others are in U+E421 to U+E425, for which the Alt codes are 58401 to 58405 respectively. I used the one at U+E424 in this example as it provides the most swash without looking too close to the descender of the p.
My allocation of U+E424 to a swash-tailed g in this particular font is just my allocation. It is not in other fonts. That is why a black rectangle or something similar shows in one of the two lines of specimen text above.
I hope that this helps.
William Overington
27 February 2008