The Scripts mode shows a long list of all available Unicode scripts. Most non-Latin characters are in the Other letter group, so if you need non-Latin characters you should use the Scripts tab for more specific results. Choosing one of the categories will bring up all the glyphs in it on the right. The Categories mode will show you a list of glyph categories like Uppercase Letter, Math Symbol or Private Use. FontLab will show you the glyphs that fit the keywords you have typed in.
![fontbase add folder fontbase add folder](https://www.simplex-soft.com/pi_func_detail/images/fontuse02.jpg)
For example, you could type: number, or lowercase greek, or uppercase geo for Georgian, or just tam for Tamil. When in Smart mode, you can type the script name and/or category or some other word combining several Unicode characters. There are three tabs in the upper left of the dialog: Smart, Categories and Scripts, which indicate three ways in which you can find the glyphs you are looking for. You can change the color flag using the dropdown menu in the bottom-left corner of the dialog. The selected glyphs will appear in your current Font window. Select any glyph, or use Cmd-click ( Ctrl-click Windows) to add additional glyphs to your selection, or use Shift-click to select a range. The remaining glyphs could be added you can select any or all of them. The cells colored gray contain glyphs that already exist in your font, and cannot be selected. This dialog displays the list of all Unicode glyphs FontLab is aware of. When you choose Add Glyphs from the Font menu, you get this dialog:
FONTBASE ADD FOLDER UPDATE
But if Add Glyphs is set to generate auto glyphs, the contents of the generated glyphs will automatically fill and update over time as you add new base and mark glyphs. For example: if the only lowercase letter you have is an “a” and you have no diacritical marks, and you add all glyphs for Western European languages, FontLab will generate a lot of blank glyphs, as well as a bunch with just the “a”. If Add Glyphs is set to generate composite glyphs, it will only add element references if it can find appropriate primary glyphs in the font. If Preferences > Operations > New glyphs > create auto layers if possible is turned on, the new glyphs will become auto glyphs, so their contents, metrics and positioning of elements and anchors will be automatically updated whenever you add or modify any primary glyphs. If you need an unencoded or arbitrarily-named glyph, a special ligature, or an alternate of a standard glyph, use the Generate Glyphs command instead.Īdd Glyphs can create more than one glyph at a time, and creates glyph layers for all font masters defined in Font Info > Masters.ĭepending on the settings in Preferences > Operations > New glyphs, the added glyphs will either be blank or will have some contents (they will be composite or auto glyphs ).įor example, if your font includes the basic Latin letters and some diacritic marks, and you use Add Glyphs to add Western or Central European accented glyphs, they will be automatically be created with the appropriate Elements placed into the glyphs for both the base characters and the accents. Add Glyphs cannot add glyphs that do not have a Unicode codepoint.
![fontbase add folder fontbase add folder](https://cdn2.iconfinder.com/data/icons/editor-vol-1/48/vertical-align-top-text-edit-512.png)
You should use it to create default glyph forms for Unicode characters. Glyph names, OT features, text, layers, color, files, UI, Python, variaĭetecting Element References or CompositesĪdd Glyphs ( Font > Add Glyphs) is one of several ways to add glyphs to your font. Variation, imported artwork, components, auto layers, elements Metrics, kerning, Font window, Font Info, hints, guides, classes General, editing, anchors, actions, FontAudit, copy-paste