[mpeg-OTspec] Toward a Composite Font format specification

Daniel Strebe dstrebe at adobe.com
Wed Aug 26 02:08:25 CEST 2009


Thanks, Ken.

Anyone else? Any conceivable use case for square advance widths in a non-square design space?

I don't like to advocate limiting what people can do. Still, everything we allow in manipulating component fonts costs engineering and testing time in clients, discouraging their interest in implementing the facility. Without examples of such fonts or even use cases for such fonts, I'm leery of incorporating the functionality. Also, I think a uniform magnification pared with independently specifiable x/y scalings might perhaps help people keep the semantics distinct in their own minds when creating recipes.

I do not think my arguments carry much weight; if anyone could come up with a hypothetical reason someone might need asymmetric magnification then I would favor adding semantics for it in the grammar.

Regards,

- daan Strebe
Senior Computer Scientist
Adobe Systems Incorporated


On 09/08/25 14:57, "Ken Lunde" <lunde at adobe.com> wrote:

daan,

There are non-square designs, but their horizontal and vertical
advances match the extent to which they are non-square. In other
words, their horizontal and vertical advances are uniform, but not the
same for both axes.

Newspaper fonts in Japan are compressed along the Y-axis. Those in
China, because horizontal is the official writing direction, are
compressed along the X-axis. AXIS, a type foundry in Japan, released
condensed and compressed versions of their AXIS family, which have
compression done along the X-axis. This allows more glyphs to fit into
a fixed area, and seems very suited for use on mobile devices.

Anyway, what I have described are fonts that have been designed using
a non-square design space.

Regards...

-- Ken

On 2009/08/25, at 14:44, Daniel Strebe wrote:

> Mikhail,
>
> Thanks for the comment.
>
> I am uncertain about the need for independent x/y
> "magnification". You correctly note that you cannot
> achieve "everything" with just uniform magnification
> combined with x/y scaling. And, like you, I cannot come up with a
> scenario that requires it.
>
> For the font experts at large: Do we know of any CJK fonts that use
> a square character advance (that is, same advance horizontally as
> vertically) but whose effective ideographic M-box is rectangular?
> (That is, the "average" glyph impression is
> significantly not-square.) Can we see any reason why anyone would
> ever create such a thing? Without a font constructed like this, I do
> not see any point in non-uniform magnification, since there would
> never be anything to adjust for.
>
> Regards,
> - daan Strebe
>
>
> On 09/08/25 13:12, "Mikhail Leonov" <mleonov at microsoft.com> wrote:
>
> Daan,
> I agree, these properties need to have distinct names that emphasize
> the difference in how metrics are scaled, as opposed to how scale
> factors are specified.
>
> In addition, should glyph magnification property have separate X and
> Y scale factors as well? I don't have concrete scenarios in
> mind that would use this feature yet, but it makes sense in terms of
> symmetry.
>
> Best regards,
> Mikhail Leonov
> Microsoft
>
>
> From: mpeg-OTspec at yahoogroups.com [mailto:mpeg-
> OTspec at yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Daniel Strebe
> Sent: Friday, August 21, 2009 5:04 PM
> To: Ken Lunde; mpeg-OTspec at yahoogroups.com
> Subject: Re: [mpeg-OTspec] Toward a Composite Font format
> specification
>
>
>
>
> Colleagues,
>
> As I explained in my earlier message found at the bottom of this e-
> mail, the two kinds of scaling are independent and mutually
> compatible operations. Both are necessary simultaneously for a good
> recipe in some situations.
>
> ScaleFactorX/ScaleFactorY use the baseline as an anchor and scale
> everything concerning the glyph, including the outline, kerning,
> escapements, and advance.
>
> Uniform scaling, on the other hand, scales from the center of the
> ideographic box, and does not affect anything but the glyph
> impression. Most importantly, it does not affect horizontal or
> vertical advance.
>
> Both kinds of scaling are needed simultaneously when adjusting
> component fonts of an ideographic script when the component fonts
> contain ideographic boxes of differing aspect ratios and
> differing "color". Color refers to the foreground/
> background ratio of a glyph as determined by of amount of the
> advance width that the average glyph consumes, and the design weight
> of the typeface.
>
> They should be given distinct names to distinguish the semantics.
> Perhaps:
>
> Glyph magnification, in place of "uniform scaling"
> Character scaling, to refer to ScaleFactorX/ScaleFactorY
>
> Regards,
>
> - daan Strebe
> Senior Computer Scientist
> Adobe Systems Incorporated
>
>
> On 09/08/21 13:59, "Ken Lunde" <lunde at adobe.com> wrote:
>
>
> Mikhail,
>
> While I cannot answer for daan, I have observed that InDesign's
> Composite Font dialog allows all three to be applied independent of
> one another. My gut feeling is that their use should be mutually
> exclusive, meaning ScaleFactor to be applied to both axes, or
> ScaleFactorX+ScaleFactorY as a pair to be set independent of one
> another. Perhaps daan can describe a usage scenario in which both
> forms of scaling are required.
>
> I would think that any use of both forms of scaling could also be
> adequately described in terms of only ScaleFactorX+ScaleFactorY as a
> pair.
>
> Regards...
>
> -- Ken
>
> On 2009/08/21, at 13:53, Mikhail Leonov wrote:
>
> > Ken and Daan,
> > Do you think ScaleFactorX+ScaleFactorY pair and ScaleFactor should
> > be mutually exclusive, or are there examples where using both forms
> > of scaling in the same entry provides value to the recipe creator?
> >
> > Mikhail Leonov
> > Microsoft
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: mpeg-OTspec at yahoogroups.com <mailto:mpeg-OTspec%40yahoogroups.com
> >  [mailto:mpeg-
> > OTspec at yahoogroups.com <mailto:OTspec%40yahoogroups.com> ] On
> Behalf Of Ken Lunde
> > Sent: Friday, August 14, 2009 6:07 PM
> > To: mpeg-OTspec at yahoogroups.com <mailto:mpeg-OTspec%40yahoogroups.com
> >
> > Subject: Re: [mpeg-OTspec] Toward a Composite Font format
> > specification
> >
> > daan,
> >
> > Thank you. This is exactly the sort of use-scenario description that
> > I was hoping to elicit with my post.
> >
> > Two additional <ComponentFont> attributes should be added:
> >
> >   ScaleFactorX
> >   ScaleFactorY
> >
> > Regards...
> >
> > -- Ken
> >
> > On 2009/08/14, at 15:58, Daniel Strebe wrote:
> >
> >> Ken,
> >>
> >> Thanks for wading into this.
> >>
> >> I think we should look at Adobe InDesign's scaling in more detail.
> >> What InDesign provides relevant to this discussion is:
> >>
> >>      * Adjust baseline of a component font.
> >>      * Scale glyphs in a component font horizontally.
> >>      * Scale glyphs in a component font vertically.
> >>      * Scale glyphs in a component font uniformly with respect to
> the
> >> glyph's center while preserving its width.
> >>
> >> You cannot fully replicate both semantics by dropping any of the
> >> three
> >> provisions. The purpose of (2) and (3) is to adjust a component
> font
> >> whose glyphs normally run along some baseline, such as Latin-script
> >> or
> >> Indic-script fonts. The adjustment applies to the glyph outline as
> >> well as its horizontal and vertical advance. The purpose of (4)
> is to
> >> adjust a component font whose glyphs run along a center line,
> such as
> >> Chinese ideographs. The adjustment applies to the glyph outline but
> >> not its horizontal or vertical advance.
> >>
> >> To elaborate, in Latin-script composite fonts, it is common to
> scale
> >> glyphs of a component font horizontally, and this scaling typically
> >> applies to all behavior of the font: the amount of horizontal space
> >> the glyph takes up, kerning amounts, escapements. In ideographic
> >> fonts, normally ideographs are considered fixed-width for
> typographic
> >> purposes, and you do not want mixed widths regardless of which
> >> component fonts the glyphs came from. Yet meanwhile you must
> balance
> >> the space of the ideographs for two or more different source fonts,
> >> each of which has a different idea of "color" for the font.
> >> (Color, meaning, the amount of whitespace consumed by the "average"
> >> glyph in the ideographic repertoire.) Therefore you scale from the
> >> center of the ideographic box but leave the metrics alone.
> >>
> >> The reason InDesign allows both forms of scaling is because (4) may
> >> be
> >> required to balance the color, while (2) and/or (3) may be required
> >> to
> >> adjust for a non-square construction of the fixed-width ideographic
> >> glyphs. While square in most fonts, especially in the past, some
> are
> >> not, and this practice is increasing. Hence, it is not so exotic
> >> for a
> >> well-constructed composite font to require all of (1), (2), (3),
> and
> >> (4).
> >>
> >> Regards,
> >>
> >> - daan Strebe
> >> Senior Computer Scientist
> >> Adobe Systems Incorporated
>
>
> .
>
>
> 
>
>


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