MODIFIER LETTER SMALL GREEK PHI in Calibri is wrong.

James Tauber via Unicode unicode at unicode.org
Wed Apr 17 18:13:16 CDT 2019


Wasn't meaning to imply Oren was wrong, just that there are multiple
versions floating around with a different glyph at the U+1D60 code point.

On Wed, Apr 17, 2019 at 6:06 PM Hans Åberg <haberg-1 at telia.com> wrote:

> You are possibly both right, because it is OK in the web font but wrong in
> the desktop font.
>
>
> > On 17 Apr 2019, at 23:53, Oren Watson via Unicode <unicode at unicode.org>
> wrote:
> >
> > You can easily reproduce this by going here:
> > https://www.fonts.com/font/microsoft-corporation/calibri/regular
> > and putting in the following string: ψϕφᵠ
> >
> > On Wed, Apr 17, 2019 at 5:23 PM James Tauber <jtauber at jtauber.com>
> wrote:
> > It looks correct in Google Docs so it appears to have been fixed in
> whatever version of the font is used there.
> >
> > James
> >
> > On Wed, Apr 17, 2019 at 5:10 PM Oren Watson via Unicode <
> unicode at unicode.org> wrote:
> > Would anyone know where to report this?
> > In the widely used Calibri typeface included with MS Office, the glyph
> shown for U+1D60 MODIFIER LETTER SMALL GREEK PHI, actually depicts a letter
> psi, not a phi.
>
>

-- 
*James Tauber*
Eldarion <https://eldarion.com/> | Scaife Viewer
<https://scaife-viewer.org/> | jktauber.com (Greek Linguistics)
<https://jktauber.com/> | Modelling Music
<https://modelling-music.com/> | Digital
Tolkien <https://digitaltolkien.com/>
Subscribe to my email newsletter <https://buttondown.email/jtauber>!
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://unicode.org/pipermail/unicode/attachments/20190417/5accbdbf/attachment.html>


More information about the Unicode mailing list