-\RequirePackage{filecontents}
-\begin{filecontents*}{\jobname.bib}
-@software{arabluatex,
- title = {The arabluatex package},
- titleaddon = {Arab\TeX\ for Lua\LaTeX},
- author = {Alessi, Robert},
- url = {https://ctan.org/pkg/arabluatex},
- version = {1.17}
-}
-@software{babel,
- title = {The Babel package},
- titleaddon = {Multilingual support for Plain TeX or LaTeX},
- author = {Bezos López, Javier and Braams, Johannes L.},
- url = {http://www.ctan.org/pkg/babel},
- version = {3.33}
-}
-@software{oldstandard,
- title = {The OldStandard package},
- titleaddon = {Old Standard: A Unicode Font for Classical and
- Medieval Studies},
- author = {Kryukov, Alexey},
- editor = {Lečić, Nikola and Tennent, Bob},
- editortype = {compiler},
- url = {http://www.ctan.org/pkg/oldstandard},
- version = {2.3}
-}
-\end{filecontents*}
-\documentclass[letterpaper]{article}
-\usepackage[no-math]{fontspec}
-\usepackage{fontspec}
-\usepackage[greek.ancient,english]{babel}
-\babeltags{grc = greek}
-
-\babelfont{rm}[BoldItalicFont={Old Standard T Italic},
-BoldItalicFeatures={RawFeature={+embolden=2}}]{Old Standard T}
-
-\babelfont[greek]{rm}[RawFeature={+ss05;+ss06},
-BoldItalicFont={Old Standard T Italic},
-BoldItalicFeatures={RawFeature={+embolden=2}}]{Old Standard T}
-
-\babelfont{tt}{CMU Typewriter Text}
-
-\newlength\defaultparindent
-\setlength\defaultparindent{\parindent}
-\usepackage{dtxdescribe}
-\setlength\parindent{\defaultparindent}
-
-\usepackage[xindy]{imakeidx}
-\indexsetup{noclearpage}
-\makeindex
-
-\usepackage{latexcolors}
-\usepackage{csquotes}
-\usepackage{varioref}
-\usepackage{hyperref}
-\hypersetup{unicode=true, linktocpage=true, colorlinks,
- allcolors=cinnamon, pdfauthor={Robert Alessi}, pdftitle={Old
- Standard T}}
-\usepackage{uri}
-
-\usepackage{enumitem}
-\setlist{nosep}
-\setlist[itemize]{label=\textendash}
-\setlist[enumerate,1]{label=(\alph*)}
-\setlist[enumerate,2]{label=\roman*.}
-\usepackage{metalogox}
-\usepackage{lettrine}
-\usepackage{setspace}
-
-\usepackage{relsize}
-\usepackage{tikz}
-\usepackage[breakable, skins, xparse, minted]{tcolorbox}
-\tcbset{colback=white, boxrule=.15mm, colframe=cinnamon, breakable}
-\newtcblisting{example}{minted options={linenos, numbersep=0mm,
- fontsize=\smaller}}
-\newtcblisting{code}{minted options={linenos, numbersep=0mm,
- fontsize=\smaller}, listing only}
-
-\usepackage[fullvoc]{arabluatex}
-\usepackage[style=oxnotes-inote]{biblatex}
-\DeclareFieldFormat{postnote}{\mkpageprefix[pagination][\mknormrange]{#1}}
-\addbibresource{oldstandard-t.bib}
-\usepackage[citecmd=autocite,defaultindex=none]{icite}
-\bibinput{oldstandard-t}
-
-\usepackage{cleveref}
-
-\usepackage[toc]{multitoc}
-
-\edef\pkgver{1.0}
-\edef\pkgdate{2019/07/24}
-\title{\mdseries\tcbox[colframe=black, enhanced, tikznode, drop
- lifted shadow, colback=white, boxrule=.25mm]%
- {\textsc{Old Standard T}\\
- \Large
- A Unicode Font for Classical and Medieval Studies\\
- \large Based on Alexey Kryukov's \emph{Old Standard}\\
- \large v\pkgver -- \pkgdate}}
-
-\author{Robert Alessi \\
-\href{mailto:alessi@robertalessi.net?Subject=arabluatex package}%
-{\texttt{alessi@robertalessi.net}}}
-\date{}
-
-\begin{document}
-\maketitle
-\footnotesize
-\tableofcontents
-\normalsize
-
-\begin{abstract}
- This font is just the same as Alexey Kryukov's beautiful \emph{Old
- Standard}. In comparison to \emph{Old Standard}, \emph{Old
- Standard T} includes new letters and some corrections.
-\end{abstract}
-
-\section{License}
-\label{sec:license}
-Copyright \textcopyright\ 2006--2011, Alexey Kryukov
-(\href{mailto:amkryukov@gmail.com}{amkryukov@gmail.com}), without
-Reserved Font Names.
-\\
-Copyright \textcopyright\ 2019, Robert Alessi
-(\href{mailto:alessi@robertalessi.net}{alessi@robertalessi.net}), without
-Reserved Font Names.
-
-Please send error reports and suggestions for improvements to Robert
-Alessi:
-\begin{itemize}
-\item email: \mailto[oldstandard-t package]{alessi@roberalessi.net}
-\item website: \url{http://www.robertalessi.net/oldstandard_t}
-\item development: \url{http://git.robertalessi.net/oldstandard_t}
-\item comments, feature requests, bug reports:
-\url{https://gitlab.com/ralessi/oldstandard_t/issues}
-\end{itemize}
-
-This Font Software is licensed under the SIL Open Font License,
-Version 1.1. This license is available with a FAQ at:
-\url{http://scripts.sil.org/OFL}
-
-\section{History}
-\label{sec:history}
-\emph{Old Standard} is a remarkable creation of Alexey Kryukov,
-inspired by a typeface most commonly used in books printed in the late
-\textsc{xix}\textsuperscript{th} and early
-\textsc{xx}\textsuperscript{th} century. The source files, which can
-be found online,\footnote{See
- \url{https://github.com/akryukov/oldstand}} have been published
-under the terms of the OFL license (see above,
-\vref{sec:license}). However, at the time of writing, the latest
-update dates back to Aug.\ 12, 2013. To be more precise, all of the
-five \enquote*{commits} the writer was able to see were pushed on the
-very same day. Since then, two \enquote*{pull requests} dating back to
-2017 have been remained unanswered. It is therefore to be feared that
-the project has been abandoned. To date, this release of \emph{Old
- Standard} has been published by Nikola Lečić and Bob Tennent and is
-available on CTAN and {\TeX}Live with a style file.\footnote{See
- \url{https://ctan.org/pkg/oldstandard}}
-
-Being unable himself to contact the author, the writer, while in need
-to have new letters included in \emph{Old Standard} and some issues
-addressed, took the decision to release \emph{Old Standard T}.
-
-\paragraph{Important disclaimer}
-The writer is very far from being able to design glyphs \emph{ex
- nihilo}. That aside, he has some limited knowledge in the use of
-FontForge, and, as a classicist, he is able to scrutinize how features
-operate and if they operate as expected.
-
-In \emph{Old Standard T}, the letter \emph{T} stands for
-\emph{Transient}, which means that \emph{Old Standard T} should only
-stay as long as what it features is not included in \emph{Old
- Standard}.
-
-\section{Documentation}
-\label{sec:documentation}
-No documentation is associated with \emph{Old Standard T} as every
-item of the original extensive documentation applies. The reader
-should refer to it.\icite{oldstandard}
-
-\section{Additions and corrections provided by
- \emph{Old Standard~T}}
-\label{sec:addit-corr-prov}
-\emph{Old Standard T} includes new letters and some corrections:
-\begin{enumerate}
-\item Small capitals for Roman, Greek and Cyrillic letters, in all
- three styles, Regular, Italic and Bold have been added. Small
- capitals, which are missing from \emph{Old Standard}, were already
- in use a century ago in fine books which used font faces very
- similar to \emph{Old Standard}. Typical use cases of small capitals
- were headers, current headings and in some books proper names.
-\item The letter G with caron above, that is: Ǧ (\verb|U+01E6|,
- uppercase) and ǧ (\verb|U+01E7|, lowercase) has been added. It is
- the only character missing from \emph{Old Standard} that is needed
- in some of the accepted standards of romanization of classical
- Arabic. See for references the current documentation of the
- \textsf{arabluatex} package.\footnote{\icite{arabluatex}[cite], sect{.}
- \enquote{Transliteration}.}
-\item Additionally, \emph{Old Standard T} corrects the \verb|+ss06|
- feature provided by \emph{Old Standard}. This feature is supposed to
- distinguish between regular and \enquote*{curled} beta (β/ϐ) and to
- print \enquote*{curled} beta (\verb|U+03D0|) in medial
- position. This feature works in most cases with \emph{Old
- Standard}. However, it fails if the beta is preceded by a vowel
- with an acute accent taken from the Greek extended Unicode block.
-\end{enumerate}
-
-\section{Usage}
-\label{sec:usage}
-\emph{Old Standard T} works with \TeX\ engines that directly support
-OpenType features such as \XeTeX\ and \LuaTeX.
-
-It is loaded with \pkg{fontspec} like so:---
-\begin{code}
- \usepackage{fontspec}
- \setmainfont{Old Standard T}
-\end{code}
-
-\paragraph{Small capitals}
-Small capitals have been added in \emph{Old Standard T} for the
-following languages or transcription schemes: French, German, Italian,
-Spanish, unaccented Greek, basic Russian and Arabic \enquote*{DMG}.
-
-The following two examples demonstrate the use of small capitals:---
-\begin{tcblisting}{minted language=latex, title=Initials, minted
- options={fontsize=\smaller, linenos, numbersep=0mm,
- highlightlines={7}}}
- \begin{center}
- CHAPTER I
-
- MR.\ SHERLOCK HOLMES
- \end{center}
-
- \lettrine[loversize=0.2]{M}{r.\ Sherlock Holmes}, who was usually
- very late in the mornings, save upon those not infrequent occasions
- when he stayed up all night, was seated at the breakfast table. I
- stood upon the hearth-rug and picked up the stick which our visitor
- had left behind him the night before. It was a fine, thick piece of
- wood, bulbous-headed, of the sort which is known as a
- \enquote{Penang lawyer.} Just under the head was a broad silver
- band, nearly an inch across. \enquote{To James Mortimer, M.R.C.S.,
- from his friends of the C.C.H.,} was engraved upon it, with the
- date \enquote{1884.} It was just such a stick as the old-fashioned
- family practitioner used to carry—dignified, solid, and reassuring.
-\end{tcblisting}
-
-\begin{tcblisting}{minted language=latex, title=Headings, minted
- options={linenos, numbersep=0mm, fontsize=\smaller,
- highlightlines={11}}}
- \doublespacing
- \begin{center}
- \textlarger{PART SECOND}.
-
- ETYMOLOGY OR THE PART OF THE SPEECH.
-
- \rule{1in}{0.4pt}
-
- I. THE VERB, \arb{al-fi`lu}.
-
- A. \textsc{General View}.
-
- 1. \emph{The Forms of the Triliteral Verb}.
- \end{center}
-\end{tcblisting}
-
-\paragraph{The letter \enquote*{ǧ}} It is used notably to print
-romanized Arabic. \emph{Old Standard T} now features this letter in
-all of the three styles (Regular, Italic and Bold):---
-\begin{tcblisting}{minted language=latex, minted
- options={fontsize=\smaller, linenos, numbersep=0mm,
- highlightlines={3,6,9}}}
- \begin{arab}[trans]
- \begin{center}
- \textbf{da^gA^gaTu \uc{'a}bI 'l-\uc{h}u_dayli 'l-\uc{`a}llAfi}
- \end{center}
- kAna \uc{'a}bU 'l-\uc{h}u_dayli 'ahd_A 'il_A \uc{m}uwaysiN
- da^gA^gaTaN. wa-kAnat da^gA^gatu-hu 'llatI 'ahdA-hA dUna mA kAna
- yuttaxa_du li-\uc{m}uwaysiN.
-
- (\uc{al-^gA.hi.zu}, \aemph{\uc{k}itAbu 'l-\uc{b}u_halA'i})
- \end{arab}
-\end{tcblisting}
-
-\paragraph{\texttt{+ss06} OpenType feature} It is commonly believed
-that all Greek vowels with acute accent taken from the Greek Extended
-Unicode block \verb|1F00–1FFF| along with standalone acute accents
-were duplicated from the Greek and Coptic Unicode block. Affected
-characters from the Greek Extended Unicode block (\verb|0370–03FF|)
-follow: \textgrc{ά, έ, ή, ί, ό, ύ, ώ, Ά, Έ, Ή, Ί, Ό, Ύ, Ώ, ΐ, ΰ, ´,
- ΅}. The counterparts of these letters in the Greek and Coptic
-Unicode block are vowels with \emph{tonoi}.
-
-However, strictly speaking, \emph{tonos} is not to be mistaken for
-\enquote*{acute}: that is for sure, as \emph{tonos} was introduced as
-a result of a reform to denote a tone, namely a stress on some vowels,
-and not a pitch, namely a rising and falling voice on accented vowels.
-Confusion began when the Greek government decreed that \emph{tonos}
-shall be the acute. From what the writer could see, many Greek fonts
-originally reflected the distinction between \emph{tonos} and acute.
-But nowadays, they simply mix them up. As a result of this confusion,
-in \emph{Old Standard}, vowels with acute were simply missing from the
-Greek Extended Block. All of them, including the standalone accents,
-have been restored in \emph{Old Standard T}. Furthermore, the rule
-that instructed to absorb vowels with acute into vowels with
-\emph{tonos} has been removed.
-
-Since assigning vowels with \emph{tonos} and vowels with acute to the
-same code points is clearly unacceptable even if the glyphs are
-identical, it is now possible in \emph{Old Standard T} to input all
-accented vowels from the Greek Extended Unicode block exclusively and
-have the substitution rules applied at the same time, as shown by the
-example that follows:---
-\begin{tcblisting}{minted language=latex, minted
- options={fontsize=\smaller, linenos, numbersep=0mm,
- highlightlines={9-10}}}
- \begin{grc}
- \begin{center}
- \textlarger{ΙΠΠΟΚΡΑΤΟΥΣ ΕΠΙΔΗΜΙΩΝ ΤΟ ΔΕΥΤΕΡΟΝ}.
-
- ΤΜΗΜΑ ΠΡΩΤΟΝ.
- \end{center}
-
- \textbf{1.} Ἄνθρακες θερινοὶ ἐν Κραννῶνι· ὗεν ἐν καύμασιν ὕδατι
- λάβρῳ δι’ ὅλου καὶ ἐγίνετο μᾶλλον νότῳ, [καὶ] ὑπογίνονται μὲν ἐν
- τῷ δέρματι ἰχῶρες· ἐγκαταλαμβανόμενοι δέ, θερμαίνονται, καὶ
- κνησμὸν ἐμποιέουσιν· εἶτα φλυκταινίδες ὥσπερ πυρίκαυστοι
- ἐπανίσταντο καὶ ὑπὸ τὸ δέρμα καίεσθαι ἐδόκεον.
- \end{grc}
-\end{tcblisting}
-
-\subsection{Bold Italic shape}
-\label{sec:bold-italic-shape}
-As \emph{Old Standard}, \emph{Old Standard T} does not feature a bold
-italic shape. However, both \XeTeX\ and \LuaTeX\ engines can emulate
-this shape as shown in the following two examples:
-
-\begin{tcblisting}{minted options={linenos, numbersep=0mm,
- fontsize=\smaller}, listing only, title=\XeLaTeX}
- \usepackage{fontspec}
- \setmainfont{Old Standard T}[
- BoldItalicFont={Old Standard T Italic},
- BoldItalicFeatures={FakeBold=1.5}]
-\end{tcblisting}
-
-\begin{tcblisting}{minted options={linenos, numbersep=0mm,
- fontsize=\smaller}, listing only, title=\LuaLaTeX}
- \usepackage{fontspec}
- \setmainfont{Old Standard T}[
- BoldItalicFont={Old Standard T Italic},
- BoldItalicFeatures={RawFeature={+embolden=2}}]
-\end{tcblisting}
-
-\subsection{Using \emph{Old Standard T} in multilingual
- documents}
-\label{sec:using-old-standard}
-\pkg{babel} provides a high level interface on top of \pkg{fontspec}
-to select fonts depending on the languages to be used.\icite[For more
-information, the reader should refer to][10,24]{babel} As an example,
-here is how \emph{Old Standard T} has been loaded in the preamble of
-this document to be compiled with \LuaLaTeX:---
-\begin{code}
- \usepackage[no-math]{fontspec}
- \usepackage{fontspec}
- \usepackage[greek.ancient,english]{babel}
- \babeltags{grc = greek}
-
- \babelfont{rm}[BoldItalicFont={Old Standard T Italic},
- BoldItalicFeatures={RawFeature={+embolden=2}}]{Old Standard T}
-
- \babelfont[greek]{rm}[RawFeature={+ss05;+ss06},
- BoldItalicFont={Old Standard T Italic},
- BoldItalicFeatures={RawFeature={+embolden=2}}]{Old Standard T}
-\end{code}
-
-Then, once \emph{Old Standard T} has been loaded with \cs{babelfont}
-properly,
-\begin{enumerate}
-\item \cs{textgrc}\marg{Greek text} can be used for short insertions
- of Greek text.
-\item \verb|\begin{grc}| ... \verb|\end{grc}| can be used for
- inserting running paragraphs of Greek text.
-\end{enumerate}
-
-\end{document}