@@ -458,7 +458,7 @@ \subsection{\textSourceText{ss01} – Alternate thorn and eth}
458458\hyperlink {OtherLatin}{\textSourceText {cv66}}), combining mark eth
459459(\unic {U+1DD9}, \textex {◌ᷙ \textAltThornEth {◌ᷙ}}), and enlarged thorn and eth
460460(see \textSourceText {\hyperlink {ss06}{ss06}}\index {ss06}).
461- This feature depends on \textSourceText {\hyperlink {req}{loca }}\index {loca } (Localized Forms), which in most applications will
461+ This feature depends on \textSourceText {\hyperlink {req}{locl }}\index {locl } (Localized Forms), which in most applications will
462462always be enabled.
463463
464464\subsection {\textSourceText {ss02} – Insular Letter-Forms }
@@ -628,10 +628,11 @@ \subsection{\textSourceText{ss07} – Underdotted Text}
628628If this feature fails for any letter, use \unic {U+0323}, combining dot below.
629629
630630\subsection {\textSourceText {ss08} – Contextual Long s }
631- In\index {ss08|textbf} English, French, and Latin text only , varies \textex {s} and \textex {ſ} according to rules
631+ In\index {ss08|textbf} English, French, and Latin text, varies \textex {s} and \textex {ſ} according to rules
632632followed by many early printers: \textex {\ContextualLongS\addfontfeature {Language=English} sports,
633633essence, stormy, disheveled, transfusions,
634- slyness, cliffside}. For this
634+ slyness, cliffside}. For other languages, the English rules are applied, though these may not always be
635+ appropriate, and for some languages additional editing may be required. For this
635636feature to work properly, \textSourceText {calt}\index {calt} “Contextual Alternates” must also be enabled (as it should be by
636637default: see \hyperlink {req}{Required Features} below). This feature does not work in {\ltech }, except in harf mode.
637638
@@ -1171,18 +1172,22 @@ \subsection{\textSourceText{ss09} – Alternate Figures}
11711172are affected by this feature.
11721173
11731174\section {Superscripts and Subscripts }
1175+
11741176\subsection {\textSourceText {sups} – Superscripts }
1175- Produces\index {sups|textbf} superscript numbers and letters. Superscript numbers are in one of two styles: oldstyle proportional
1176- (from oldstyle numbers) and lining tabular (from lining numbers). All lowercase
1177- letters of the basic Latin alphabet are covered, and most uppercase letters: \sups {\ltab {0123} \oprop {4567} abcde ABDEG}. Wherever
1178- superscripts are needed (e.g. for footnote numbers), use \textSourceText {sups} instead of the raised and scaled
1179- characters generated by some programs. With sups: \sups {4567}. Scaled: \textsuperscript {4567}.
1177+ Produces\index {sups|textbf} superscript numbers and letters. Superscript numbers are in one of two styles:
1178+ oldstyle proportional (from oldstyle numbers) and lining tabular (from lining numbers). All lowercase
1179+ letters of the basic Latin alphabet are covered, and most uppercase letters (those encoded in Unicode).
1180+ The lowercase Greek modifier letters are also covered: \sups {\ltab {0123} \oprop {4567} abcde ABDEG βγδε}.
1181+ Wherever superscripts are needed (e.g. for footnote numbers), use \textSourceText {sups} instead of the raised
1182+ and scaled characters generated by some programs. With sups: \sups {4567}. Scaled: \textsuperscript {4567}.
11801183
11811184\subsection {\textSourceText {subs} – Subscripts }
1182- Produces\index {subs|textbf} subscript numbers. Only produces oldstyle proportional and lining tabular figures:
1183- \subs {\oprop {2345} \ltab {8901}}.
1185+ Produces\index {subs|textbf} subscripts,including oldstyle proportional and lining tabular figures
1186+ (\subs {\oprop {2345} \ltab {8901}}) and the Latin and Greek letters included in the Unicode collection of subscripts
1187+ (\subs {\, a e h i j k l m n o p r s t u v x β γ ρ φ χ\, })
11841188
11851189\section {Punctuation and Symbols }
1190+
11861191MUFI encodes nearly twenty marks of punctuation in the PUA. In Junicode these can be accessed in
11871192either of two ways: all are indexed variants of \textex {.} (period), and all are associated with the Unicode marks of
11881193punctuation they most resemble (but it should not be inferred that the medieval marks are semantically identical with
@@ -1722,11 +1727,11 @@ \subsection{Lady Junicode}
17221727If you encounter her while adventuring in her domains, greet her respectfully, and she will welcome you graciously.
17231728
17241729\section {Required Features }\hypertarget {req}{}\index {ccmp|textbf}\index {calt|textbf}\index {liga|textbf}%
1725- \index {loca |textbf}\index {rlig|textbf}\index {kern|textbf}\index {mark|textbf}\index {mkmk|textbf}
1730+ \index {locl |textbf}\index {rlig|textbf}\index {kern|textbf}\index {mark|textbf}\index {mkmk|textbf}
17261731Required features, which provide some of the font’s most basic functionality—ligatures, support for
17271732other features, kerning, and more—include \textSourceText {ccmp} (Glyph Composition/Decomposition),
17281733\textSourceText {calt} (Contextual Alternates), \textSourceText {liga} (Standard Ligatures),
1729- \textSourceText {loca } (Localized Forms), \textSourceText {rlig} (Required Ligatures),
1734+ \textSourceText {locl } (Localized Forms), \textSourceText {rlig} (Required Ligatures),
17301735\textSourceText {kern} (Horizontal Kerning), and \textSourceText {mark}/\textSourceText {mkmk} (Mark
17311736Positioning). In MS Word these features have to be explicitly enabled on the Advanced tab of the Font dialog (Ctrl-D or
17321737Cmd-D: enable Kerning, Standard Ligatures, and Contextual Alternates, and the others will be enabled automatically),
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