Incompatiblity of Adobe font and xpinyin package?












1















One of font package (i.e. Adobe Garamond Pro) is not compatible with vowels encoding using xpinyin package. Can I exclude these fonts?



documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
setmainfont{Adobe Garamond Pro} %%problematic with pinyin
begin{document}
xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
end{document}


enter image description here










share|improve this question























  • This is a just a MWE. I need the Adobe fonts! @Henri Menke

    – Tony Tan
    3 hours ago






  • 2





    I am assuming that you understand Chinese, so I will copy and paste the following description in the user manual of xpinyin: 设置拼音的字体,缺省值是 normalfont,即以正文西文字体相同。为了保证拼音能正确输出,最好选用收字量较大的西文字体, which roughly translates to The font for pīnyīn is the same as the Latin main font. To guarantee correct output of pīnyīn, better choose a Latin font which contains a lot of glyphs So clearly Adobe Garamond Pro is NOT suitable for pīnyīn here.

    – Ruixi Zhang
    1 hour ago








  • 1





    For a comprehensive discussion on pīnyīn, I suggest this article by Type is Beautiful. The article (in Chinese, simplified and traditional versions available) also gives suggestions on the font choice for pīnyīn.

    – Ruixi Zhang
    1 hour ago











  • @RuixiZhang Thank you for your information!

    – Tony Tan
    25 mins ago
















1















One of font package (i.e. Adobe Garamond Pro) is not compatible with vowels encoding using xpinyin package. Can I exclude these fonts?



documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
setmainfont{Adobe Garamond Pro} %%problematic with pinyin
begin{document}
xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
end{document}


enter image description here










share|improve this question























  • This is a just a MWE. I need the Adobe fonts! @Henri Menke

    – Tony Tan
    3 hours ago






  • 2





    I am assuming that you understand Chinese, so I will copy and paste the following description in the user manual of xpinyin: 设置拼音的字体,缺省值是 normalfont,即以正文西文字体相同。为了保证拼音能正确输出,最好选用收字量较大的西文字体, which roughly translates to The font for pīnyīn is the same as the Latin main font. To guarantee correct output of pīnyīn, better choose a Latin font which contains a lot of glyphs So clearly Adobe Garamond Pro is NOT suitable for pīnyīn here.

    – Ruixi Zhang
    1 hour ago








  • 1





    For a comprehensive discussion on pīnyīn, I suggest this article by Type is Beautiful. The article (in Chinese, simplified and traditional versions available) also gives suggestions on the font choice for pīnyīn.

    – Ruixi Zhang
    1 hour ago











  • @RuixiZhang Thank you for your information!

    – Tony Tan
    25 mins ago














1












1








1








One of font package (i.e. Adobe Garamond Pro) is not compatible with vowels encoding using xpinyin package. Can I exclude these fonts?



documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
setmainfont{Adobe Garamond Pro} %%problematic with pinyin
begin{document}
xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
end{document}


enter image description here










share|improve this question














One of font package (i.e. Adobe Garamond Pro) is not compatible with vowels encoding using xpinyin package. Can I exclude these fonts?



documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
setmainfont{Adobe Garamond Pro} %%problematic with pinyin
begin{document}
xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
end{document}


enter image description here







xetex font-encodings xpinyin






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked 4 hours ago









Tony TanTony Tan

1186




1186













  • This is a just a MWE. I need the Adobe fonts! @Henri Menke

    – Tony Tan
    3 hours ago






  • 2





    I am assuming that you understand Chinese, so I will copy and paste the following description in the user manual of xpinyin: 设置拼音的字体,缺省值是 normalfont,即以正文西文字体相同。为了保证拼音能正确输出,最好选用收字量较大的西文字体, which roughly translates to The font for pīnyīn is the same as the Latin main font. To guarantee correct output of pīnyīn, better choose a Latin font which contains a lot of glyphs So clearly Adobe Garamond Pro is NOT suitable for pīnyīn here.

    – Ruixi Zhang
    1 hour ago








  • 1





    For a comprehensive discussion on pīnyīn, I suggest this article by Type is Beautiful. The article (in Chinese, simplified and traditional versions available) also gives suggestions on the font choice for pīnyīn.

    – Ruixi Zhang
    1 hour ago











  • @RuixiZhang Thank you for your information!

    – Tony Tan
    25 mins ago



















  • This is a just a MWE. I need the Adobe fonts! @Henri Menke

    – Tony Tan
    3 hours ago






  • 2





    I am assuming that you understand Chinese, so I will copy and paste the following description in the user manual of xpinyin: 设置拼音的字体,缺省值是 normalfont,即以正文西文字体相同。为了保证拼音能正确输出,最好选用收字量较大的西文字体, which roughly translates to The font for pīnyīn is the same as the Latin main font. To guarantee correct output of pīnyīn, better choose a Latin font which contains a lot of glyphs So clearly Adobe Garamond Pro is NOT suitable for pīnyīn here.

    – Ruixi Zhang
    1 hour ago








  • 1





    For a comprehensive discussion on pīnyīn, I suggest this article by Type is Beautiful. The article (in Chinese, simplified and traditional versions available) also gives suggestions on the font choice for pīnyīn.

    – Ruixi Zhang
    1 hour ago











  • @RuixiZhang Thank you for your information!

    – Tony Tan
    25 mins ago

















This is a just a MWE. I need the Adobe fonts! @Henri Menke

– Tony Tan
3 hours ago





This is a just a MWE. I need the Adobe fonts! @Henri Menke

– Tony Tan
3 hours ago




2




2





I am assuming that you understand Chinese, so I will copy and paste the following description in the user manual of xpinyin: 设置拼音的字体,缺省值是 normalfont,即以正文西文字体相同。为了保证拼音能正确输出,最好选用收字量较大的西文字体, which roughly translates to The font for pīnyīn is the same as the Latin main font. To guarantee correct output of pīnyīn, better choose a Latin font which contains a lot of glyphs So clearly Adobe Garamond Pro is NOT suitable for pīnyīn here.

– Ruixi Zhang
1 hour ago







I am assuming that you understand Chinese, so I will copy and paste the following description in the user manual of xpinyin: 设置拼音的字体,缺省值是 normalfont,即以正文西文字体相同。为了保证拼音能正确输出,最好选用收字量较大的西文字体, which roughly translates to The font for pīnyīn is the same as the Latin main font. To guarantee correct output of pīnyīn, better choose a Latin font which contains a lot of glyphs So clearly Adobe Garamond Pro is NOT suitable for pīnyīn here.

– Ruixi Zhang
1 hour ago






1




1





For a comprehensive discussion on pīnyīn, I suggest this article by Type is Beautiful. The article (in Chinese, simplified and traditional versions available) also gives suggestions on the font choice for pīnyīn.

– Ruixi Zhang
1 hour ago





For a comprehensive discussion on pīnyīn, I suggest this article by Type is Beautiful. The article (in Chinese, simplified and traditional versions available) also gives suggestions on the font choice for pīnyīn.

– Ruixi Zhang
1 hour ago













@RuixiZhang Thank you for your information!

– Tony Tan
25 mins ago





@RuixiZhang Thank you for your information!

– Tony Tan
25 mins ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















3














Adobe Garamond does not encode ǎ (U+01CE LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH CARON) and is also missing ̌ (U+030C COMBINING CARON). I can think of two solutions:





  1. Use a different font. There are plenty of nice Garamond-derived typefaces out there which do not have such spotty encoding (and are non-commercial!).



    documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
    usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
    setmainfont{EB Garamond}
    begin{document}
    xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
    end{document}


    enter image description here



    documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
    usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
    setmainfont{Cormorant Garamond}
    begin{document}
    xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
    end{document}


    enter image description here




  2. Remap ǎ (U+01CE LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH CARON) to something else. Here I map it to just the regular a (U+0061 LATIN SMALL LETTER A). The mapping below is derived from the standard tex-text mapping.



    acaron.map



    LHSName "acaron"
    RHSName "a"
    pass(Unicode)
    ; replace acaron with a
    U+01CE > U+0061 ;
    ; ligatures from Knuth's original CMR fonts
    U+002D U+002D <> U+2013 ; -- -> en dash
    U+002D U+002D U+002D <> U+2014 ; --- -> em dash

    U+0027 <> U+2019 ; ' -> right single quote
    U+0027 U+0027 <> U+201D ; '' -> right double quote
    U+0022 > U+201D ; " -> right double quote

    U+0060 <> U+2018 ; ` -> left single quote
    U+0060 U+0060 <> U+201C ; `` -> left double quote

    U+0021 U+0060 <> U+00A1 ; !` -> inverted exclam
    U+003F U+0060 <> U+00BF ; ?` -> inverted question


    The I compile the mapping using the TECkit tool.



    teckit_compile -u acaron.map -o acaron.tec


    Afterwards it can be used in XeLaTeX.



    documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
    usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
    setmainfont[Mapping=acaron]{Adobe Garamond Pro}
    begin{document}
    xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
    end{document}


    enter image description here



    You could also choose the mapping U+01CE > U+02C7 U+0061 ;, i.e. caron followed by a, which then renders as



    enter image description here



    That's not pretty but at least preserves the meaning.








share|improve this answer


























  • +1 for mentioning EB Garamond! However, as a native speaker, I disagree with the last solution with U+01CE > U+02C7 U+0061 ;. A more acceptable solution would be wang3 with the 3 denoting the tone, while wang (with only the regular a) would be utterly wrong. ;-)

    – Ruixi Zhang
    1 hour ago





















0














According to Adobe’s website, Garamond Pro might not have the precomposed character, but it does have the combining caron accent, U+030C.



So, while you might not be able to type ǎ (U+01CE), you should be able to display the same grapheme as (U+61 U+030C).






share|improve this answer























    Your Answer








    StackExchange.ready(function() {
    var channelOptions = {
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "85"
    };
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
    createEditor();
    });
    }
    else {
    createEditor();
    }
    });

    function createEditor() {
    StackExchange.prepareEditor({
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
    convertImagesToLinks: false,
    noModals: true,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: null,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    imageUploader: {
    brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
    contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
    allowUrls: true
    },
    onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    });


    }
    });














    draft saved

    draft discarded


















    StackExchange.ready(
    function () {
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f473125%2fincompatiblity-of-adobe-font-and-xpinyin-package%23new-answer', 'question_page');
    }
    );

    Post as a guest















    Required, but never shown

























    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    3














    Adobe Garamond does not encode ǎ (U+01CE LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH CARON) and is also missing ̌ (U+030C COMBINING CARON). I can think of two solutions:





    1. Use a different font. There are plenty of nice Garamond-derived typefaces out there which do not have such spotty encoding (and are non-commercial!).



      documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
      usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
      setmainfont{EB Garamond}
      begin{document}
      xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
      end{document}


      enter image description here



      documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
      usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
      setmainfont{Cormorant Garamond}
      begin{document}
      xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
      end{document}


      enter image description here




    2. Remap ǎ (U+01CE LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH CARON) to something else. Here I map it to just the regular a (U+0061 LATIN SMALL LETTER A). The mapping below is derived from the standard tex-text mapping.



      acaron.map



      LHSName "acaron"
      RHSName "a"
      pass(Unicode)
      ; replace acaron with a
      U+01CE > U+0061 ;
      ; ligatures from Knuth's original CMR fonts
      U+002D U+002D <> U+2013 ; -- -> en dash
      U+002D U+002D U+002D <> U+2014 ; --- -> em dash

      U+0027 <> U+2019 ; ' -> right single quote
      U+0027 U+0027 <> U+201D ; '' -> right double quote
      U+0022 > U+201D ; " -> right double quote

      U+0060 <> U+2018 ; ` -> left single quote
      U+0060 U+0060 <> U+201C ; `` -> left double quote

      U+0021 U+0060 <> U+00A1 ; !` -> inverted exclam
      U+003F U+0060 <> U+00BF ; ?` -> inverted question


      The I compile the mapping using the TECkit tool.



      teckit_compile -u acaron.map -o acaron.tec


      Afterwards it can be used in XeLaTeX.



      documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
      usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
      setmainfont[Mapping=acaron]{Adobe Garamond Pro}
      begin{document}
      xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
      end{document}


      enter image description here



      You could also choose the mapping U+01CE > U+02C7 U+0061 ;, i.e. caron followed by a, which then renders as



      enter image description here



      That's not pretty but at least preserves the meaning.








    share|improve this answer


























    • +1 for mentioning EB Garamond! However, as a native speaker, I disagree with the last solution with U+01CE > U+02C7 U+0061 ;. A more acceptable solution would be wang3 with the 3 denoting the tone, while wang (with only the regular a) would be utterly wrong. ;-)

      – Ruixi Zhang
      1 hour ago


















    3














    Adobe Garamond does not encode ǎ (U+01CE LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH CARON) and is also missing ̌ (U+030C COMBINING CARON). I can think of two solutions:





    1. Use a different font. There are plenty of nice Garamond-derived typefaces out there which do not have such spotty encoding (and are non-commercial!).



      documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
      usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
      setmainfont{EB Garamond}
      begin{document}
      xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
      end{document}


      enter image description here



      documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
      usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
      setmainfont{Cormorant Garamond}
      begin{document}
      xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
      end{document}


      enter image description here




    2. Remap ǎ (U+01CE LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH CARON) to something else. Here I map it to just the regular a (U+0061 LATIN SMALL LETTER A). The mapping below is derived from the standard tex-text mapping.



      acaron.map



      LHSName "acaron"
      RHSName "a"
      pass(Unicode)
      ; replace acaron with a
      U+01CE > U+0061 ;
      ; ligatures from Knuth's original CMR fonts
      U+002D U+002D <> U+2013 ; -- -> en dash
      U+002D U+002D U+002D <> U+2014 ; --- -> em dash

      U+0027 <> U+2019 ; ' -> right single quote
      U+0027 U+0027 <> U+201D ; '' -> right double quote
      U+0022 > U+201D ; " -> right double quote

      U+0060 <> U+2018 ; ` -> left single quote
      U+0060 U+0060 <> U+201C ; `` -> left double quote

      U+0021 U+0060 <> U+00A1 ; !` -> inverted exclam
      U+003F U+0060 <> U+00BF ; ?` -> inverted question


      The I compile the mapping using the TECkit tool.



      teckit_compile -u acaron.map -o acaron.tec


      Afterwards it can be used in XeLaTeX.



      documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
      usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
      setmainfont[Mapping=acaron]{Adobe Garamond Pro}
      begin{document}
      xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
      end{document}


      enter image description here



      You could also choose the mapping U+01CE > U+02C7 U+0061 ;, i.e. caron followed by a, which then renders as



      enter image description here



      That's not pretty but at least preserves the meaning.








    share|improve this answer


























    • +1 for mentioning EB Garamond! However, as a native speaker, I disagree with the last solution with U+01CE > U+02C7 U+0061 ;. A more acceptable solution would be wang3 with the 3 denoting the tone, while wang (with only the regular a) would be utterly wrong. ;-)

      – Ruixi Zhang
      1 hour ago
















    3












    3








    3







    Adobe Garamond does not encode ǎ (U+01CE LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH CARON) and is also missing ̌ (U+030C COMBINING CARON). I can think of two solutions:





    1. Use a different font. There are plenty of nice Garamond-derived typefaces out there which do not have such spotty encoding (and are non-commercial!).



      documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
      usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
      setmainfont{EB Garamond}
      begin{document}
      xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
      end{document}


      enter image description here



      documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
      usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
      setmainfont{Cormorant Garamond}
      begin{document}
      xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
      end{document}


      enter image description here




    2. Remap ǎ (U+01CE LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH CARON) to something else. Here I map it to just the regular a (U+0061 LATIN SMALL LETTER A). The mapping below is derived from the standard tex-text mapping.



      acaron.map



      LHSName "acaron"
      RHSName "a"
      pass(Unicode)
      ; replace acaron with a
      U+01CE > U+0061 ;
      ; ligatures from Knuth's original CMR fonts
      U+002D U+002D <> U+2013 ; -- -> en dash
      U+002D U+002D U+002D <> U+2014 ; --- -> em dash

      U+0027 <> U+2019 ; ' -> right single quote
      U+0027 U+0027 <> U+201D ; '' -> right double quote
      U+0022 > U+201D ; " -> right double quote

      U+0060 <> U+2018 ; ` -> left single quote
      U+0060 U+0060 <> U+201C ; `` -> left double quote

      U+0021 U+0060 <> U+00A1 ; !` -> inverted exclam
      U+003F U+0060 <> U+00BF ; ?` -> inverted question


      The I compile the mapping using the TECkit tool.



      teckit_compile -u acaron.map -o acaron.tec


      Afterwards it can be used in XeLaTeX.



      documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
      usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
      setmainfont[Mapping=acaron]{Adobe Garamond Pro}
      begin{document}
      xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
      end{document}


      enter image description here



      You could also choose the mapping U+01CE > U+02C7 U+0061 ;, i.e. caron followed by a, which then renders as



      enter image description here



      That's not pretty but at least preserves the meaning.








    share|improve this answer















    Adobe Garamond does not encode ǎ (U+01CE LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH CARON) and is also missing ̌ (U+030C COMBINING CARON). I can think of two solutions:





    1. Use a different font. There are plenty of nice Garamond-derived typefaces out there which do not have such spotty encoding (and are non-commercial!).



      documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
      usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
      setmainfont{EB Garamond}
      begin{document}
      xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
      end{document}


      enter image description here



      documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
      usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
      setmainfont{Cormorant Garamond}
      begin{document}
      xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
      end{document}


      enter image description here




    2. Remap ǎ (U+01CE LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH CARON) to something else. Here I map it to just the regular a (U+0061 LATIN SMALL LETTER A). The mapping below is derived from the standard tex-text mapping.



      acaron.map



      LHSName "acaron"
      RHSName "a"
      pass(Unicode)
      ; replace acaron with a
      U+01CE > U+0061 ;
      ; ligatures from Knuth's original CMR fonts
      U+002D U+002D <> U+2013 ; -- -> en dash
      U+002D U+002D U+002D <> U+2014 ; --- -> em dash

      U+0027 <> U+2019 ; ' -> right single quote
      U+0027 U+0027 <> U+201D ; '' -> right double quote
      U+0022 > U+201D ; " -> right double quote

      U+0060 <> U+2018 ; ` -> left single quote
      U+0060 U+0060 <> U+201C ; `` -> left double quote

      U+0021 U+0060 <> U+00A1 ; !` -> inverted exclam
      U+003F U+0060 <> U+00BF ; ?` -> inverted question


      The I compile the mapping using the TECkit tool.



      teckit_compile -u acaron.map -o acaron.tec


      Afterwards it can be used in XeLaTeX.



      documentclass[margin=10pt]{standalone}
      usepackage{xeCJK,xpinyin}
      setmainfont[Mapping=acaron]{Adobe Garamond Pro}
      begin{document}
      xpinyin*{学而不思则罔}
      end{document}


      enter image description here



      You could also choose the mapping U+01CE > U+02C7 U+0061 ;, i.e. caron followed by a, which then renders as



      enter image description here



      That's not pretty but at least preserves the meaning.









    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 2 hours ago

























    answered 2 hours ago









    Henri MenkeHenri Menke

    72.6k8160270




    72.6k8160270













    • +1 for mentioning EB Garamond! However, as a native speaker, I disagree with the last solution with U+01CE > U+02C7 U+0061 ;. A more acceptable solution would be wang3 with the 3 denoting the tone, while wang (with only the regular a) would be utterly wrong. ;-)

      – Ruixi Zhang
      1 hour ago





















    • +1 for mentioning EB Garamond! However, as a native speaker, I disagree with the last solution with U+01CE > U+02C7 U+0061 ;. A more acceptable solution would be wang3 with the 3 denoting the tone, while wang (with only the regular a) would be utterly wrong. ;-)

      – Ruixi Zhang
      1 hour ago



















    +1 for mentioning EB Garamond! However, as a native speaker, I disagree with the last solution with U+01CE > U+02C7 U+0061 ;. A more acceptable solution would be wang3 with the 3 denoting the tone, while wang (with only the regular a) would be utterly wrong. ;-)

    – Ruixi Zhang
    1 hour ago







    +1 for mentioning EB Garamond! However, as a native speaker, I disagree with the last solution with U+01CE > U+02C7 U+0061 ;. A more acceptable solution would be wang3 with the 3 denoting the tone, while wang (with only the regular a) would be utterly wrong. ;-)

    – Ruixi Zhang
    1 hour ago













    0














    According to Adobe’s website, Garamond Pro might not have the precomposed character, but it does have the combining caron accent, U+030C.



    So, while you might not be able to type ǎ (U+01CE), you should be able to display the same grapheme as (U+61 U+030C).






    share|improve this answer




























      0














      According to Adobe’s website, Garamond Pro might not have the precomposed character, but it does have the combining caron accent, U+030C.



      So, while you might not be able to type ǎ (U+01CE), you should be able to display the same grapheme as (U+61 U+030C).






      share|improve this answer


























        0












        0








        0







        According to Adobe’s website, Garamond Pro might not have the precomposed character, but it does have the combining caron accent, U+030C.



        So, while you might not be able to type ǎ (U+01CE), you should be able to display the same grapheme as (U+61 U+030C).






        share|improve this answer













        According to Adobe’s website, Garamond Pro might not have the precomposed character, but it does have the combining caron accent, U+030C.



        So, while you might not be able to type ǎ (U+01CE), you should be able to display the same grapheme as (U+61 U+030C).







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 2 hours ago









        DavislorDavislor

        6,0571227




        6,0571227






























            draft saved

            draft discarded




















































            Thanks for contributing an answer to TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange!


            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

            But avoid



            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function () {
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f473125%2fincompatiblity-of-adobe-font-and-xpinyin-package%23new-answer', 'question_page');
            }
            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown





















































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown

































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown







            Popular posts from this blog

            What other Star Trek series did the main TNG cast show up in?

            Berlina muro

            Berlina aerponto