Ares Land wrote: ↑Tue Jul 26, 2022 5:18 am
I have a question... OK lots of questions for creators of logographic scripts, syllabaries and other non-alphabetic scripts.
If you draw these on the computer, do you use any specific programs, ie do you use Photoshop/GIMP or a font creator?
And if you have a font creator, do you have any recommandations (also, where do you put the glyphs in Unicode?)
And finally, do you have any good methods for logograph input to share?
I have no experience whatsoever in this area, but rehashing things I've
heard...
Clawgrip used to recommend shelling out the USD $150 for the standard licence of High Logic FontCreator, but I don't know why (it costs $200 if you want to use automated kerning, which seems nice). I once asked a professional designer who does Korean and Chinese fonts (and occasionally Greek for fun), and she recommended High Logic FontCreator due to its "opentype features" (which she said would come in handy if I were to make an Arabic font—my interest at the time) and mid-range cost, or if you have more money to spend, FontLab.
Many people seem to use Inkscape (which is free) to do the vector drawing when it comes to the glyph shapes, but I think both FontCreator and FontLab come with their own vector drawing tools anyway.
I recall Guitarplayer saying that he found it shameful that Unicode in practice is very much intended to be used with natlangs, and that the best way to encode a conscript is to put the glyphs in something with similar properties. So if you're using right-to-left, use the Arabic range. I don't know why this was or even if I'm misremembering something (shouldn't the Private Use Area allow just about any property?). (EDIT: Actually, I'm vaguely remembering it may have had something to do with the not-so-widely-supported Graphite technology he was using.)
Clawgrip found it easiest to just map his logographic conscript to Japanese kanji with similar meanings, as he knew Japanese anyway and could use a Japanese input method. I once heard some Classical Chinese nerds saying they were looking into
Linux Rime to be able to map Classical Chinese characters to Middle Chinese pronunciation, using a Middle Chinese romanization as the "pinyin". Rime is unfortunately meant for Chinese only, which means
the documentation is only available in Mandarin... If you know how to code you could probably whip up your own romanization-to-conscript GUI converter though, in theory you just need to load a key-value mapping.