Yes. I saw it in a sample of typeset Gamilaraay back in college and fell in love.
I cannot get the breve under the h to compose correctly in section headings. It lets me do a breve above just fine but not below.
Yes. I saw it in a sample of typeset Gamilaraay back in college and fell in love.
I cannot get the breve under the h to compose correctly in section headings. It lets me do a breve above just fine but not below.
The one on Wikipedia, right? That’s what I immediately thought of too. (Though personally I consider that a mere typographic variant of ⟨ŋ⟩.)Man in Space wrote: ↑Wed Apr 23, 2025 6:45 amYes. I saw it in a sample of typeset Gamilaraay back in college and fell in love.
Odd. Is there any reason you can’t just use Unicode ⟨ḫ⟩?I cannot get the breve under the h to compose correctly in section headings. It lets me do a breve above just fine but not below.
That’s the one, yes.bradrn wrote: ↑Wed Apr 23, 2025 7:51 amThe one on Wikipedia, right? That’s what I immediately thought of too. (Though personally I consider that a mere typographic variant of ⟨ŋ⟩.)Man in Space wrote: ↑Wed Apr 23, 2025 6:45 amYes. I saw it in a sample of typeset Gamilaraay back in college and fell in love.
It is a font issue, yes. I am too attached to the family of typefaces to select a new one.bradrn wrote: ↑Wed Apr 23, 2025 7:51 amOdd. Is there any reason you can’t just use Unicode ⟨ḫ⟩?Man in Space wrote: ↑Wed Apr 23, 2025 6:45 amI cannot get the breve under the h to compose correctly in section headings. It lets me do a breve above just fine but not below.
(But I suspect an issue with the font, rather than anything to do with LaTeX.)
It's partially an intentional choice: Instead of multiple continents like we have, what if everyone were stuck (primarily) on a single, huge landmass? (Also, back in the day, I used worldengine to generate a map for the planet; the current version used it as inspiration in conjunction with 12 Word Cartographer's guide, which is, incidentally, where the Winkel Tripel came from).
Yeah, it kind of messes with me too. CC3+ does have a bit of a learning curve and I've not quite figured much of it out yet.WeepingElf wrote: ↑Thu May 08, 2025 2:39 pm The isohypses without indication to which side the terrain slopes are confusing.
How do you mean?/nɒtɛndəduːd/ wrote: ↑Thu May 08, 2025 3:31 pmIt would seem that you've taken a bit more influence from Eurasia for the majority of your land mass than I'd like the taste of, but there's nothing wrong with that, and that's a me problem. If you like it, then I've no room to judge.
WeepingElf wrote: ↑Thu May 08, 2025 2:39 pmAnd that's a very long river in the center of your supercontinent - we don't have such long rivers here on Earth because our continents just aren't big enough - but nothing wrong with that.
That is the River Sobadegh, which is the river in dahsar history and culture. It generally flows east-west, emptying into the western sea. The eastern side of the river does start on higher ground; another factor here is that there is some tectonic stuff going on--a lot of the Sobadegh is situated where there's a rift opening in the middle of the continent, with some of the cratons wanting to go north and some wanting to go south. (That curly part where it goes north, about halfway between the center and the right edge of the map, is the ultimate headwaters; in that mountain/valley complex--which is sort of the New Guinea of this world--is where the adasar ultimately spread out from.)keenir wrote: ↑Thu May 08, 2025 4:27 pmnow that I can see it, the river seems to be running along the foot of the mountain range, which seems plausible to me:
not only could there be some height difference in the river between the two ends (assuming it flows in the same direction the entire way) but maybe thats where some of the water for the river comes from: washed down the slopes.
well, just now comparing the map to a legitimate map of Eurasia, there's a bit less similarity than I thought I first saw, but most of it I still see. for example, the thinner part of the main landmass to the northwest would correlate to Europe, the island northwest of that would be Iceland, the southeastern part of the main landmass looks like Indochina, the islands along the eastern side of the continent are the Asian parts of the ring of fire, et cetera. again, none of that is an issue, I'm just a little off-put.Man in Space wrote: ↑Thu May 08, 2025 4:46 pmHow do you mean?/nɒtɛndəduːd/ wrote: ↑Thu May 08, 2025 3:31 pmIt would seem that you've taken a bit more influence from Eurasia for the majority of your land mass than I'd like the taste of, but there's nothing wrong with that, and that's a me problem. If you like it, then I've no room to judge.
Ah, I get it now! No, it’s not a bogogeohistorical situation, and I’ve been trying to identify and prune stuff that seemed too unreasonably similar and/or on-the-nose as possible. In the specific case of those islands, it’s kind of a wash—by default, Íröd is more volcanically active than Earth (they never do anything small over there)./nɒtɛndəduːd/ wrote: ↑Thu May 08, 2025 5:41 pmwell, just now comparing the map to a legitimate map of Eurasia, there's a bit less similarity than I thought I first saw, but most of it I still see. for example, the thinner part of the main landmass to the northwest would correlate to Europe, the island northwest of that would be Iceland, the southeastern part of the main landmass looks like Indochina, the islands along the eastern side of the continent are the Asian parts of the ring of fire, et cetera. again, none of that is an issue, I'm just a little off-put.Man in Space wrote: ↑Thu May 08, 2025 4:46 pmHow do you mean?/nɒtɛndəduːd/ wrote: ↑Thu May 08, 2025 3:31 pmIt would seem that you've taken a bit more influence from Eurasia for the majority of your land mass than I'd like the taste of, but there's nothing wrong with that, and that's a me problem. If you like it, then I've no room to judge.
Okay, that makes a bit more sense, thank you for the explanation.Man in Space wrote: ↑Thu May 08, 2025 4:46 pm That is the River Sobadegh, which is the river in dahsar history and culture. It generally flows east-west, emptying into the western sea. The eastern side of the river does start on higher ground; another factor here is that there is some tectonic stuff going on--a lot of the Sobadegh is situated where there's a rift opening in the middle of the continent, with some of the cratons wanting to go north and some wanting to go south. (That curly part where it goes north, about halfway between the center and the right edge of the map, is the ultimate headwaters; in that mountain/valley complex--which is sort of the New Guinea of this world--is where the adasar ultimately spread out from.)