Background
I'm trying to convert the Google Noto Sans JP font from a .otf
to a .ttf
, using the following fontforge script:
#!/usr/bin/env fontforge
Open($1)
CIDFlatten()
Generate($1:r + ".ttf")
Close()
When I call Open
on the .otf
, I get a load of errors saying that there are lots of missing glyphs:
No glyph with unicode U+07d22 in font
No glyph with unicode U+07d2f in font
No glyph with unicode U+07da0 in font
...
My script converts the .otf
into a .ttf
but, sure enough, when I load the font these characters aren't rendered (they look like this: [X]
).
So I'd like to fill in the gaps and copy identical glyphs into the missing slots.
The Problem
So I run the following script to try and substitute one of the missing glyphs (U+7d22) with an identical one (U+f96a):
#!/usr/bin/env fontforge
Open($1)
CIDFlatten()
Select(0uf96a)
Copy()
Select(0u7d22)
Paste()
SelectNone()
Generate($1:r + ".ttf")
Close()
However fontforge fails to select the non-existent character U+7d22:
Select: Character not found: U+7D22
Does anyone know how to copy a glyph to a codepoint that doesn't have a glyph?
Or in other words, does anyone know how to fill the gaps in this font?
otf
tottf
? (the font will blow up in size, and all glyph outlines will get lossy-converted from cubic Bezier to quadratic Bezier form)ttf
and nototf
- I don't really mind about the losses involved when going backwards to a less advanced format.