1 \RequirePackage{filecontents
}
2 \begin{filecontents*
}{\jobname.bib
}
4 title =
{The arabluatex package
},
5 titleaddon =
{Arab
\TeX\ for Lua
\LaTeX},
6 author =
{Alessi, Robert
},
7 url =
{https://ctan.org/pkg/arabluatex
},
11 title =
{The Babel package
},
12 titleaddon =
{Multilingual support for Plain TeX or LaTeX
},
13 author =
{Bezos López, Javier and Braams, Johannes L.
},
14 url =
{http://www.ctan.org/pkg/babel
},
17 @software
{oldstandard,
18 title =
{The OldStandard package
},
19 titleaddon =
{Old Standard: A Unicode Font for Classical and
21 author =
{Kryukov, Alexey
},
22 editor =
{Lečić, Nikola and Tennent, Bob
},
23 editortype =
{compiler
},
24 url =
{http://www.ctan.org/pkg/oldstandard
},
28 \documentclass[letterpaper
]{article
}
29 \usepackage[no-math
]{fontspec
}
31 \usepackage[greek.ancient,english
]{babel
}
32 \babeltags{grc = greek
}
34 \babelfont{rm
}[BoldItalicFont=
{Old Standard Italic
},
35 BoldItalicFeatures=
{RawFeature=
{+embolden=
2}}]{Old Standard
}
37 \babelfont[greek
]{rm
}[RawFeature=
{+ss05;+ss06
},
38 BoldItalicFont=
{Old Standard Italic
},
39 BoldItalicFeatures=
{RawFeature=
{+embolden=
2}}]{Old Standard
}
41 \babelfont{tt
}{CMU Typewriter Text
}
43 \newlength\defaultparindent
44 \setlength\defaultparindent{\parindent}
45 \usepackage{dtxdescribe
}
46 \setlength\parindent{\defaultparindent}
48 \usepackage[xindy
]{imakeidx
}
49 \indexsetup{noclearpage
}
52 \usepackage{latexcolors
}
56 \hypersetup{unicode=true, linktocpage=true, colorlinks,
57 allcolors=cinnamon, pdfauthor=
{Robert Alessi
}, pdftitle=
{Old
63 \setlist[itemize
]{label=
\textendash}
64 \setlist[enumerate,
1]{label=(
\alph*)
}
65 \setlist[enumerate,
2]{label=
\roman*.
}
66 \usepackage{metalogox
}
72 \usepackage[breakable, skins, xparse, minted
]{tcolorbox
}
73 \tcbset{colback=white, boxrule=
.15mm, colframe=cinnamon, breakable
}
74 \newtcblisting{example
}{minted options=
{linenos, numbersep=
0mm,
76 \newtcblisting{code
}{minted options=
{linenos, numbersep=
0mm,
77 fontsize=
\smaller}, listing only
}
79 \usepackage[fullvoc
]{arabluatex
}
80 \usepackage[style=oxnotes-inote
]{biblatex
}
81 \DeclareFieldFormat{postnote
}{\mkpageprefix[pagination
][\mknormrange]{#1}}
82 \addbibresource{oldstandard.bib
}
83 \usepackage[citecmd=autocite,defaultindex=none
]{icite
}
84 \bibinput{oldstandard
}
88 \usepackage[toc
]{multitoc
}
91 \edef\pkgdate{2019/
07/
25}
92 \title{\mdseries\tcbox[colframe=black, enhanced, tikznode, drop
93 lifted shadow, colback=white, boxrule=
.25mm
]%
94 {\textsc{Old Standard
}\\
96 A Unicode Font for Classical and Medieval Studies\\
97 \large Based on Alexey Kryukov's
\emph{Old Standard
}\\
98 \large v
\pkgver --
\pkgdate}}
100 \author{Robert Alessi \\
101 \href{mailto:alessi@robertalessi.net?Subject=arabluatex package
}%
102 {\texttt{alessi@robertalessi.net
}}}
112 This font is just the same as Alexey Kryukov's beautiful
\emph{Old
113 Standard
}. In comparison to
\emph{Old Standard
}, it includes new
114 letters and some corrections.
119 Copyright
\textcopyright\
2006--
2011, Alexey Kryukov
120 (
\href{mailto:amkryukov@gmail.com
}{amkryukov@gmail.com
}), without
123 Copyright
\textcopyright\
2019, Robert Alessi
124 (
\href{mailto:alessi@robertalessi.net
}{alessi@robertalessi.net
}), without
127 Please send error reports and suggestions for improvements to Robert
130 \item email:
\mailto[oldstandard package
]{alessi@roberalessi.net
}
131 \item website:
\url{http://www.robertalessi.net/oldstandard
}
132 \item development:
\url{http://git.robertalessi.net/oldstandard
}
133 \item comments, feature requests, bug reports:
134 \url{https://gitlab.com/ralessi/oldstandard/issues
}
137 This Font Software is licensed under the SIL Open Font License,
138 Version
1.1. This license is available with a FAQ at:
139 \url{http://scripts.sil.org/OFL
}
143 \emph{Old Standard
} is a remarkable creation of Alexey Kryukov,
144 inspired by a typeface most commonly used in books printed in the late
145 \textsc{xix
}\textsuperscript{th
} and early
146 \textsc{xx
}\textsuperscript{th
} century. The source files, which can
147 be found online,
\footnote{See
148 \url{https://github.com/akryukov/oldstand
}} have been published
149 under the terms of the OFL license (see above,
150 \vref{sec:license
}). However, at the time of writing, the latest
151 update dates back to Aug.\
12,
2013. To be more precise, all of the
152 five
\enquote*
{commits
} the writer was able to see were pushed on the
153 very same day. Since then, two
\enquote*
{pull requests
} dating back to
154 2017 have been remained unanswered. It is therefore to be feared that
155 the project has been abandoned. To date, this release of
\emph{Old
156 Standard
} has been published by Nikola Lečić and Bob Tennent and is
157 available on CTAN and
{\TeX}Live with a style file.
\footnote{See
158 \url{https://ctan.org/pkg/oldstandard
}}
160 Being unable himself to contact the author, the writer, while in need
161 to have new letters included in
\emph{Old Standard
} and some issues
162 addressed, took the decision to make a new release
\emph{Old Standard
}.
164 \paragraph{Important disclaimer
}
165 The writer is very far from being able to design glyphs
\emph{ex
166 nihilo
}. That aside, he has some limited knowledge in the use of
167 FontForge, and, as a classicist, he is able to scrutinize how features
168 operate and if they operate as expected.
170 \section{Documentation
}
171 \label{sec:documentation
}
172 No documentation is associated with this release of
\emph{Old
173 Standard
} as every item of the original extensive documentation
174 applies. The reader should refer to it.
\icite{oldstandard
}
176 \section{Additions and corrections provided
}
177 \label{sec:addit-corr-prov
}
178 This release of
\emph{Old Standard
} includes new letters and some
181 \item Small capitals for Roman, Greek and Cyrillic letters, in all
182 three styles, Regular, Italic and Bold have been added. Small
183 capitals, which are missing from
\emph{Old Standard
}, were already
184 in use a century ago in fine books which used font faces very
185 similar to
\emph{Old Standard
}. Typical use cases of small capitals
186 were headers, current headings and in some books proper names.
187 \item The letter G with caron above, that is: Ǧ (
\verb|U+
01E6|,
188 uppercase) and ǧ (
\verb|U+
01E7|, lowercase) has been added. It is
189 the only character missing from
\emph{Old Standard
} that is needed
190 in some of the accepted standards of romanization of classical
191 Arabic. See for references the current documentation of the
192 \textsf{arabluatex
} package.
\footnote{\icite{arabluatex
}[cite
], sect
{.
}
193 \enquote{Transliteration
}.
}
194 \item Additionally, this release corrects the
\verb|+ss06| feature
195 which is supposed to distinguish between regular and
196 \enquote*
{curled
} beta (β/ϐ) and to print
\enquote*
{curled
} beta
197 (
\verb|U+
03D0|) in medial position. This feature worked in most
198 cases with the previous releases. However, it failed if the beta was
199 preceded by a vowel with an acute accent taken from the Greek
200 extended Unicode block.
205 \emph{Old Standard
} works with
\TeX\ engines that directly support
206 OpenType features such as
\XeTeX\ and
\LuaTeX.
208 It is loaded with
\pkg{fontspec
} like so:---
210 \usepackage{fontspec
}
211 \setmainfont{Old Standard
}
214 \paragraph{Small capitals
}
215 Small capitals have been added for the following languages or
216 transcription schemes: French, German, Italian, Spanish, unaccented
217 Greek, basic Russian and Arabic
\enquote*
{DMG
}.
219 The following two examples demonstrate the use of small capitals:---
220 \begin{tcblisting
}{minted language=latex, title=Initials, minted
221 options=
{fontsize=
\smaller, linenos, numbersep=
0mm,
229 \lettrine[loversize=
0.2]{M
}{r.\ Sherlock Holmes
}, who was usually
230 very late in the mornings, save upon those not infrequent occasions
231 when he stayed up all night, was seated at the breakfast table. I
232 stood upon the hearth-rug and picked up the stick which our visitor
233 had left behind him the night before. It was a fine, thick piece of
234 wood, bulbous-headed, of the sort which is known as a
235 \enquote{Penang lawyer.
} Just under the head was a broad silver
236 band, nearly an inch across.
\enquote{To James Mortimer, M.R.C.S.,
237 from his friends of the C.C.H.,
} was engraved upon it, with the
238 date
\enquote{1884.
} It was just such a stick as the old-fashioned
239 family practitioner used to carry—dignified, solid, and reassuring.
242 \begin{tcblisting
}{minted language=latex, title=Headings, minted
243 options=
{linenos, numbersep=
0mm, fontsize=
\smaller,
244 highlightlines=
{11}}}
247 \textlarger{PART SECOND
}.
249 ETYMOLOGY OR THE PART OF THE SPEECH.
253 I. THE VERB,
\arb{al-fi`lu
}.
255 A.
\textsc{General View
}.
257 1.
\emph{The Forms of the Triliteral Verb
}.
261 \paragraph{The letter
\enquote*
{ǧ
}} It is used notably to print
262 romanized Arabic.
\emph{Old Standard
} now features this letter in all
263 of the three styles (Regular, Italic and Bold):---
264 \begin{tcblisting
}{minted language=latex, minted
265 options=
{fontsize=
\smaller, linenos, numbersep=
0mm,
266 highlightlines=
{3,
6,
9}}}
269 \textbf{da^gA^gaTu
\uc{'a
}bI 'l-
\uc{h
}u_dayli 'l-
\uc{`a
}llAfi
}
271 kAna
\uc{'a
}bU 'l-
\uc{h
}u_dayli 'ahd_A 'il_A
\uc{m
}uwaysiN
272 da^gA^gaTaN. wa-kAnat da^gA^gatu-hu 'llatI 'ahdA-hA dUna mA kAna
273 yuttaxa_du li-
\uc{m
}uwaysiN.
275 (
\uc{al-^gA.hi.zu
},
\aemph{\uc{k
}itAbu 'l-
\uc{b
}u_halA'i
})
279 \paragraph{\texttt{+ss06
} OpenType feature
} It is commonly believed
280 that all Greek vowels with acute accent taken from the Greek Extended
281 Unicode block
\verb|
1F00–
1FFF| along with standalone acute accents
282 were duplicated from the Greek and Coptic Unicode block. Affected
283 characters from the Greek Extended Unicode block (
\verb|
0370–
03FF|)
284 follow:
\textgrc{ά, έ, ή, ί, ό, ύ, ώ, Ά, Έ, Ή, Ί, Ό, Ύ, Ώ, ΐ, ΰ, ´,
285 ΅
}. The counterparts of these letters in the Greek and Coptic
286 Unicode block are vowels with
\emph{tonoi
}.
288 However, strictly speaking,
\emph{tonos
} is not to be mistaken for
289 \enquote*
{acute
}: that is for sure, as
\emph{tonos
} was introduced as
290 a result of a reform to denote a tone, namely a stress on some vowels,
291 and not a pitch, namely a rising and falling voice on accented vowels.
292 Confusion began when the Greek government decreed that
\emph{tonos
}
293 shall be the acute. From what the writer could see, many Greek fonts
294 originally reflected the distinction between
\emph{tonos
} and acute.
295 But nowadays, they simply mix them up. As a result of this confusion,
296 in
\emph{Old Standard
}, vowels with acute were simply missing from the
297 Greek Extended Block. All of them, including the standalone accents,
298 have been restored. Furthermore, the rule that instructed to absorb
299 vowels with acute into vowels with
\emph{tonos
} has been removed.
301 Since assigning vowels with
\emph{tonos
} and vowels with acute to the
302 same code points is clearly unacceptable even if the glyphs are
303 identical, it is now possible in
\emph{Old Standard
} to input all
304 accented vowels from the Greek Extended Unicode block exclusively and
305 have the substitution rules applied at the same time, as shown by the
306 example that follows:---
307 \begin{tcblisting
}{minted language=latex, minted
308 options=
{fontsize=
\smaller, linenos, numbersep=
0mm,
309 highlightlines=
{9-
10}}}
312 \textlarger{ΙΠΠΟΚΡΑΤΟΥΣ ΕΠΙΔΗΜΙΩΝ ΤΟ ΔΕΥΤΕΡΟΝ
}.
317 \textbf{1.
} Ἄνθρακες θερινοὶ ἐν Κραννῶνι· ὗεν ἐν καύμασιν ὕδατι
318 λάβρῳ δι’ ὅλου καὶ ἐγίνετο μᾶλλον νότῳ,
[καὶ
] ὑπογίνονται μὲν ἐν
319 τῷ δέρματι ἰχῶρες· ἐγκαταλαμβανόμενοι δέ, θερμαίνονται, καὶ
320 κνησμὸν ἐμποιέουσιν· εἶτα φλυκταινίδες ὥσπερ πυρίκαυστοι
321 ἐπανίσταντο καὶ ὑπὸ τὸ δέρμα καίεσθαι ἐδόκεον.
325 \subsection{Bold Italic shape
}
326 \label{sec:bold-italic-shape
}
327 \emph{Old Standard
} does not feature a bold italic shape. However,
328 both
\XeTeX\ and
\LuaTeX\ engines can emulate this shape as shown in
329 the following two examples:
331 \begin{tcblisting
}{minted options=
{linenos, numbersep=
0mm,
332 fontsize=
\smaller}, listing only, title=
\XeLaTeX}
333 \usepackage{fontspec
}
334 \setmainfont{Old Standard
}[
335 BoldItalicFont=
{Old Standard Italic
},
336 BoldItalicFeatures=
{FakeBold=
1.5}]
339 \begin{tcblisting
}{minted options=
{linenos, numbersep=
0mm,
340 fontsize=
\smaller}, listing only, title=
\LuaLaTeX}
341 \usepackage{fontspec
}
342 \setmainfont{Old Standard
}[
343 BoldItalicFont=
{Old Standard Italic
},
344 BoldItalicFeatures=
{RawFeature=
{+embolden=
2}}]
347 \subsection{Using
\emph{Old Standard
} in multilingual
349 \label{sec:using-old-standard
}
350 \pkg{babel
} provides a high level interface on top of
\pkg{fontspec
}
351 to select fonts depending on the languages to be used.
\icite[For more
352 information, the reader should refer to
][10,
24]{babel
} As an example,
353 here is how
\emph{Old Standard
} has been loaded in the preamble of
354 this
document to be compiled with
\LuaLaTeX:---
356 \usepackage[no-math
]{fontspec
}
357 \usepackage{fontspec
}
358 \usepackage[greek.ancient,english
]{babel
}
359 \babeltags{grc = greek
}
361 \babelfont{rm
}[BoldItalicFont=
{Old Standard Italic
},
362 BoldItalicFeatures=
{RawFeature=
{+embolden=
2}}]{Old Standard
}
364 \babelfont[greek
]{rm
}[RawFeature=
{+ss05;+ss06
},
365 BoldItalicFont=
{Old Standard Italic
},
366 BoldItalicFeatures=
{RawFeature=
{+embolden=
2}}]{Old Standard
}
369 Then, once
\emph{Old Standard
} has been loaded with
\cs{babelfont
}
372 \item \cs{textgrc
}\marg{Greek text
} can be used for short insertions
374 \item \verb|
\begin{grc
}| ...
\verb|
\end{grc
}| can be used for
375 inserting running paragraphs of Greek text.