[texhax] Hebrew fonts with XeLaTeX
Moshe Kamensky
moshe.kamensky at googlemail.com
Sun Feb 27 20:41:03 CET 2011
* Joel C. Salomon <joelcsalomon at gmail.com> [27/02/11 12:24]:
> On 02/27/2011 09:30 AM, Moshe Kamensky wrote:
> > I am trying write a document in Hebrew, using XeLaTeX. Things mostly
> > seem to work, except for some issues which, I think, are related to
> > fonts.
> >
> > I tried using either the Cardo or the Ezra SIL fonts, both of which I
> > found recommended in various place on the web. The main problem is that
> > I cannot get bold and italic text to work. In fact, it seems that the
> > whole text is in bold. Commands like \emph and \textbf seem to have no
> > effect. In the log file I see:
> <snip>
> > Which seems to suggest that these variants don't exist. So my questions
> > here are, whether they really don't exist, or should I use some
> > different commands? And if they don't exist, is there some other Hebrew
> > font where they do exist? Is there a way to "produce" bold and italic
> > variants? Also, is there a way to make the normal text less bold? As it
> > is, it is very hard to visually spot the theorems, proofs, etc.
>
> Cardo and Ezra (as well as SBL Hebrew) are aimed at the scholarly
> market: They have support for niqqud and te‘amim and other details
> needed for printing the Tanach. But, as you noted, they don’t have bold
> or italic variants used for runs of modern-style text.
>
> Automatically producing bold or italic is possible, but produces ugly
> results; similarly trying to reduce the weight of a font.
>
> Your best bet is in finding a different font to use.
>
Thanks. I have now found some fonts that include italic and bold support
in Hebrew. They are:
Linux Libertine from http://linuxlibertine.sourceforge.net/
FreeSans and FreeSerif from
http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/freefont/
DejaVuSans from http://dejavu.sourceforge.net/
Thank you,
Moshe
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