Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
Original comment by roozbeh@google.com
on 25 Oct 2014 at 1:34
Original comment by roozbeh@google.com
on 16 Jan 2015 at 6:12
Thanks a lot for the report.
It seems that JA (જ) is wider in Noto compared to Windows fonts, and NA (ન)
doesn't have the loop that Windows fonts have. On YA (ય), it seems that some
fonts (like Microsoft's Shruti) have a rounded shape on its left, while Noto
has a sharp shape.
Assigning to Jelle to tell us if these are as designed.
(Xiangye, would also ask our reviewers about the three issues?)
Original comment by roozbeh@google.com
on 3 Apr 2015 at 2:40
Feedback from our reviewers:
We've taken a look at the current release versions (v1.02, hinted).
JA:
A bit ungainly: overly wide and the upper loop very large, causing the letter
to appear unbalanced. The large loop may be intentional, though, in order to
maximise legibility at small sizes. The loop is usually quite large and but
here would benefit from being reduced slightly.
NA:
The closed knot is certainly legitimate in Gujurati, and is the typical form in
higher contrast text types. [The open ring form is common in lower contrast
'sans' types, but not necessarily definitive of the style.]
However, the knot itself is usually bigger than in Devanagari. I agree that it
is a bit modest here. Also, in Gujarati it is usually curved slightly not as
straight as in Devanagari but I guess for UI it needs to be straight/flat. I
do agree that Na does look narrow when set before the Va and Sa in the words
shown in the image. I would make it wider and the knot slightly bigger.
YA:
Ya a bit wide, but overall Noto Sans Gujarati is a broad face (cf. BHA ભ,
which is very wide; again, this may be intentional vis à vis legibility at
small sizes).The real problem is, at small sizes in Noto Sans, Ya is not as
easily distinguishable from Pa as one would expect.
Spacing
The OneIndia feedback also compares spacing unfavourably with 'current font'.
Without seeing the comparison, it is difficult to qualify this statement. Noto
Sans Gujurati spacing is on the tight side, relative to the width of many
counters, but not debilitatingly so.
JYa
The font renders the conjunct JYa જ્ય using the half J-. This is
acceptable, but since the font contains numerous ligatures for -Ya it would be
nice to have one for this sequence also, so that a more natural connection
could be formed between these letters.
OTOH, having said all that, I do not think any of these things are particularly
problematic. I was able to read these ‘problematic’ glyphs easily from the
contexts.
Original comment by xiangye@chromium.org
on 3 Apr 2015 at 8:47
Attachments:
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
mukes...@oneindia.co.in
on 13 Oct 2014 at 9:24Attachments: