This is one of my favorite clever LibreOffice features! And it’s a marvellous thing about the PDF format specification, too — I wonder who was the first bright mind to think about embedding an ODF into a PDF 🙂
]]>In reply to jbfaure.
24.2
]]>Hi,
This blog post says that the next version will be numbered 24.2 while the message on the tdf-announce mailing-list says 2024.02. What is the correct format?
Best regards. JBF
]]>In reply to Ken Phillips.
Hi Ken,
Yes, it’s FREE! You just have to register for the conference and check the right option. You have the details in this blog post.
See you at the conference!
Gabriel
]]>Is this FREE?
]]>hi!
which one of the available options for downloading LibreOffice represents Windows arm64 (Qualcomm 8cx gen2) version?
Great work
]]>Thanks a lot Khaled Sab. !
]]>In reply to sivachander.
Thank you!
The best book I know about fonts is Fonts & Encodings by Yannis Haralambous, though it is a bit outdated know. This is an (incomplete) attempt at doing a more up-to-date version of it https://simoncozens.github.io/fonts-and-layout/
You might also want to check FreeType and HarfBuzz documentation, as these are the main open source libraries for handling fonts:
http://freetype.org/freetype2/docs/documentation.html
https://harfbuzz.github.io/
Respected Khaled Sab!
Wonderful passion ! Congratulations . I am also fascinated by the font presentation for complex scripts My mother tongue is Telugu , an Indian language. Can you please suggest any book to learn about font tables , and how the system accesses them . Thanks a lot . Am an old time engineer , no formal software training , I am familiar with QB64 programming. Thanks again.
With Respectful greetings
sivachander
hyderabad india