-
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 399
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Request: Localized Cyrillic for Bulgarian, Macedonian & Serbian #562
Comments
For this to be actionable, we need details on what it means to localize for these languages. What glyphs (Unicode codepoints) need special treatment and what are some canonical, reliable reference designs |
Some info to get you started... Bulgarian Cyrillic LocalizationChanges 16 roman characters and 7 italic characters. Something I have been working on ... It is a work-in-progress, but that first page gives you a quick overview. Source Serif 4 and Source Sans 3 both include Bulgarian localization. It is done in Good article about Bulgarian localization: I will post similar info about Macedonian and Serbian later. |
Was making some Bulgarian examples and found substantial differences in how many characters are replaced in different fonts. FOSS Fonts (# alternates): Arsenal (21), BitterPro (26), Commissioner (22), Cormorant Garamond (23), Fira Sans (62), FiraGo (62), Linguistics Pro (27), Manrope (23), Montserrat (23), PT Sans Expert v2.004 (25), Sophia Sans (30), Source Sans 3 (23), Source Serif 4 (23), Spectral (23), Unbounded (20), Vollkorn (26), Ysabeau (25) Commercial Fonts: SF Pro Text (27, incl. small caps), |
There is no official Bulgarian style and no official glyph set for it either. There is no requirement, as such, to have that style in Bulgarian. It’s just a popular style so it’s nice to have. |
Here’s some samples: |
@KrasnayaPloshchad that book doesn't mention letter forms. |
Related to #567 |
ExamplesCounterexamplesNoncomprehensive. There are no other bg-Cyrl families in the Microsoft Typography Font Library. SIL has not updated current LGC families such as Andika. STI Pub has not updated STIX Two. Noto has not been updated either. Roboto also. See relevant discussion on notofonts/latin-greek-cyrillic#187 (Jul 2014) and notofonts/latin-greek-cyrillic#172 (Nov 2016). See also googlefonts/roboto-2#215 (Dec 2016). See attached
|
@moyogo This is true. There is no official form of Bulgarian Cyrillic, although fonts with Bulgarian Cyrillic forms are widely spread in Bulgaria in the last 5 years. |
The oval Cyrillic alphabet has already been codified as an official book standard for printed letters in BulgariaThe oval form of the Cyrillic alphabet is recognized as official in Bulgaria and is legalized by the Bulgarian Language Institute of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences and the Ministry of Education and Science of the Republic of Bulgaria through the online edition of the "Official Spelling Dictionary of the Bulgarian Language". The Bulgarian Language Institute of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences is the only institution in Bulgaria that is authorized to be officially responsible for the codification norms of the modern Bulgarian literary language. In the "Bulgarian alphabet" section, for the first time, the printed capital and small letters are represented by an oval form of the Cyrillic alphabet, and this already turns the oval Cyrillic into an official form of the printed alphabet in Bulgaria. It is curious that the website of the publication "Official Spelling Dictionary of the Bulgarian Language" uses the font of the Russian company "Paratype" - PT Serif BGR. |
Currently, Inter uses default traditional Cyrillic for all Cyrillic languages.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: