![]() In the case of Devanagari fonts, these glyphs are critical the characters in the PDF above are sufficient to define all of the characters needed for the language, but insufficient to render them in a legible manner.įor example, the simple word "yajña" (in transliterated text) is represented in Devanagari as \u092F (ya), \u091c (ja), \u094d (virama), \u091e (ña). ![]() The issue is with the extended glyphs that these fonts provide to support combinations of characters these glyphs are beyond the range provided in the PDF linked above, and are used as part of the character->glyph mapping in the font. However, neither the stock Unity GUI font renderer, nor any of the several font-rendering-related assets that I've downloaded, has managed to render it correctly. I have several TTF fonts that have very good support for Devanagari, and which render well in web browsers, Notepad etc. ![]() I am very interested in rendering Unicode text involving Devanagari characters (used for languages like Hindi, Sanskrit, etc.).
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