| Sojka P., Sevecek P., "Hyphenation in T E X --- Quo Vadis?", Proceedings of the Eighth European T E X Conference (Sept. 26--30, 1994, Gdansk, Poland), 59--68. |
....erroneous pattern lists and frustrated users unable to find a reliable pattern set for the language they want to use. In another sense, pattern creation is essential for the wide spread dissemination of T E X, which is now being used at least for all the languages examined by Sojka and Sevecek [12], and certainly also for many other modern and ancient languages. An indirect proof is given by the existence of fonts for exotic languages, fonts that could not be of any use if nobody set texts in those languages setting text implies breaking words at the end of the line, so that some sort ....
.... patterns without being confined to cm fonts, yet still referring to the extended dc or em font setup, according to the Cork encoding (see Beccari, elsewhere in this issue [3] The attentive reader may ask himself: Why didn t they simply retrieve the Romanian patterns that Sojka and Sevecek [12] mention had been prepared by Malyshev or by Samarin and Urvantsev The answer is simple: the articles mentioned in Sojka and Sevecek deal with Russian; the Romanian patterns are only mentioned in passing; Sojka probably got hold of them, but we did not succeed. Moreover, according to Sojka and ....
[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]
Sojka P., Sevecek P., "Hyphenation in T E X --- Quo Vadis?", Proceedings of the Eighth European T E X Conference (Sept. 26--30, 1994, Gdansk, Poland), 59--68.
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