Awesome
OpenType shaping documents
Sponsored by YesLogic
<aside>Thanks also to the developers of HarfBuzz and AllSorts, plus many other font engineers and text-encoding experts for their generosity of time and insightful contributions.</aside>
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This repository is an active WORK IN PROGRESS.
NONE of the documents you currently see here are complete nor are they suitable for reference. PLEASE do not use them as a guide or as a general information source.
As long as this warning text remains visible, the above holds true.
At present, we are seeking comments and bugfixes on the Indic-script, Arabic-like, Hangul, Hebrew, Thai/Lao, Tibetan, Khmer, Myanmar, default, and <abbr>USE</abbr> documents. Interested readers and contributors can begin at the
- Indic General
- (Devanagari, Bengali, Gujarati, Gurmukhi, Kannada, Malayalam, Oriya, Tamil, Telugu, Sinhala)
- Arabic General
- (Arabic, N'Ko, Syriac, Mongolian)
- Hangul
- Hebrew
- Khmer
- Thai and Lao
- Tibetan
- Myanmar
- Universal Shaping Engine (<abbr>USE</abbr>)
- All complex scripts that are not handled by a dedicated script-specific shaping model
- Default
- All non-complex scripts
- Emoji
- Emoji sequences do not constitute a separate shaping model, but handling emoji sequences can incorporate many of the same Opentype mechanisms and should not be overlooked
shaping documents and are encouraged to submit their feedback on the text or images of any of the linked scripts. The documents are organized by script; where there are multiple shaping models for a particular script (including deprecated models), the various models are all addressed in the same script-specific document.
The documents also include a description of normalization in the OpenType shaping context, which differs from Unicode normalization in several respects.
Various notes about the document set and the details of its scope, limitations, and quirks are also provided.
Some errata about the "upstream" specifications and reference documents are noted separately.
In its final form, this repository will hold documentation describing the shaping behavior used for layout of OpenType text. In particular, it will focus on complex scripts.
In addition to the primary, per-script documents, implementers and other interesteed readers are encouraged to check the character tables for correctness and to examine the image-generation logs to identify issues seen in the inline images.
References
These documents cite the following informative references:
- The Microsoft Script development specifications, which document the behaviors expected for OpenType Layout fonts and provide guidance & examples for type designers. OpenType is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation.
- Related portions of the Microsoft OpenType specification, such as the OpenType Layout tag registry and OpenType Layout common table formats, which list and define feature tags, script & language tags, and other internals of compliant OpenType font binaries. OpenType is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation.
- The HarfBuzz project, which includes a free-software/open-source implementation of OpenType Layout shaping with full source code and documentation.
- The Allsorts project, which includes a free-software/open-source implementation of OpenType Layout shaping with full source code and documentation.
- The Unicode Standard and related Unicode Consortium projects such as the Unicode Character Database, which defines Unicode code points and formal character properties used in shaping. Unicode and the Unicode Logo are registered trademarks of Unicode, Inc. in the United States and other countries.
- The YesLogic text corpus, which includes real-world text data for several Indic scripts, scraped from Wikipedia, Reddit, and multiple online news sources. This data is used to test shaping in Allsorts and Prince.
- Known but unofficial information about other shaping-engine
projects. Primarily this includes tests and reproducible issues
found via HarfBuzz, because
HarfBuzz intentionally aims to produce results that will 100% match
the output of Microsoft Uniscribe (not counting cases where
Uniscribe's output is known to be incorrect, of course).
Note: occasionally, tests or issues documenting the behavior of Apple CoreText are also included, but CoreText compatibility is not an explicit goal for HarfBuzz.