Output Devanagari (Hindi) from raw unicode using luatex Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)Conflict between color, graphicx and libertineXeTex - Times New Roman font for Romanian characters ș, ț, Ș and ȚIs LuaLaTeX producing faulty pdfs?Using a handwriting font from myscriptfont.comVietnamese in TexShop — MacTexspecial characters cannot show after changing font with lualatexVery multilingual work'table index is nil' error when using the Avenir font with fontspec + luatexTurkish characters do not appear end of the wordWho changed my Chinese character?

If the probability of a dog barking one or more times in a given hour is 84%, then what is the probability of a dog barking in 30 minutes?

In musical terms, what properties are varied by the human voice to produce different words / syllables?

How long can equipment go unused before powering up runs the risk of damage?

How were pictures turned from film to a big picture in a picture frame before digital scanning?

Tannaka duality for semisimple groups

Why is it faster to reheat something than it is to cook it?

Google .dev domain strangely redirects to https

Prove that BD bisects angle ABC

How did Fremen produce and carry enough thumpers to use Sandworms as de facto Ubers?

Is there public access to the Meteor Crater in Arizona?

Semigroups with no morphisms between them

How can I set the aperture on my DSLR when it's attached to a telescope instead of a lens?

Most bit efficient text communication method?

What is best way to wire a ceiling receptacle in this situation?

What does this say in Elvish?

Lagrange four-squares theorem --- deterministic complexity

Deconstruction is ambiguous

The test team as an enemy of development? And how can this be avoided?

Why are vacuum tubes still used in amateur radios?

A term for a woman complaining about things/begging in a cute/childish way

Would it be easier to apply for a UK visa if there is a host family to sponsor for you in going there?

What is the meaning of 'breadth' in breadth first search?

How do living politicians protect their readily obtainable signatures from misuse?

What makes a man succeed?



Output Devanagari (Hindi) from raw unicode using luatex



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)Conflict between color, graphicx and libertineXeTex - Times New Roman font for Romanian characters ș, ț, Ș and ȚIs LuaLaTeX producing faulty pdfs?Using a handwriting font from myscriptfont.comVietnamese in TexShop — MacTexspecial characters cannot show after changing font with lualatexVery multilingual work'table index is nil' error when using the Avenir font with fontspec + luatexTurkish characters do not appear end of the wordWho changed my Chinese character?










2















I can get the following code to compile, using luatex, with the Hindi/Devanagari characters correctly printed in the pdf:



documentclassarticle
usepackagefontspec
setmainfontTimes New Roman
newfontscriptDevanagarideva,dev2
newfontfacehindi[Script=Devanagari]Lohit-Devanagari.ttf

begindocument
Here is normal text.
hindi नमस्ते
enddocument


However, I'm using a program that outputs the tex and that won't allow me to type the Hindi script into my tex editor; instead, it will only give me the unicode version of the word, "नमस्ते", which is "<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>".



How can I get luatex to compile correctly from these raw code characters? What I want to compile (to produce a pdf with the single word "नमस्ते") is something like this:



documentclassarticle
usepackagefontspec
setmainfontTimes New Roman
newfontscriptDevanagarideva,dev2
newfontfacehindi[Script=Devanagari]Lohit-Devanagari.ttf

begindocument
Here is normal text.
hindi <U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>
enddocument


...but that won't work.










share|improve this question
























  • Can you get your program to output char"0928char"092Echar"0938char"094Dchar"0924 char"0947 instead of <U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>?

    – Mico
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    Yes, I could do that! What would the full script then need to look like?

    – lethalSinger
    2 hours ago











  • I'm afraid I cannot answer your question as I don't know which scripting tool you employ. I just posted an answer, though, which creates a Lua function that converts <U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947> to char"0928char"092Echar"0938char"094Dchar"0924 char"0947.

    – Mico
    2 hours ago















2















I can get the following code to compile, using luatex, with the Hindi/Devanagari characters correctly printed in the pdf:



documentclassarticle
usepackagefontspec
setmainfontTimes New Roman
newfontscriptDevanagarideva,dev2
newfontfacehindi[Script=Devanagari]Lohit-Devanagari.ttf

begindocument
Here is normal text.
hindi नमस्ते
enddocument


However, I'm using a program that outputs the tex and that won't allow me to type the Hindi script into my tex editor; instead, it will only give me the unicode version of the word, "नमस्ते", which is "<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>".



How can I get luatex to compile correctly from these raw code characters? What I want to compile (to produce a pdf with the single word "नमस्ते") is something like this:



documentclassarticle
usepackagefontspec
setmainfontTimes New Roman
newfontscriptDevanagarideva,dev2
newfontfacehindi[Script=Devanagari]Lohit-Devanagari.ttf

begindocument
Here is normal text.
hindi <U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>
enddocument


...but that won't work.










share|improve this question
























  • Can you get your program to output char"0928char"092Echar"0938char"094Dchar"0924 char"0947 instead of <U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>?

    – Mico
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    Yes, I could do that! What would the full script then need to look like?

    – lethalSinger
    2 hours ago











  • I'm afraid I cannot answer your question as I don't know which scripting tool you employ. I just posted an answer, though, which creates a Lua function that converts <U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947> to char"0928char"092Echar"0938char"094Dchar"0924 char"0947.

    – Mico
    2 hours ago













2












2








2








I can get the following code to compile, using luatex, with the Hindi/Devanagari characters correctly printed in the pdf:



documentclassarticle
usepackagefontspec
setmainfontTimes New Roman
newfontscriptDevanagarideva,dev2
newfontfacehindi[Script=Devanagari]Lohit-Devanagari.ttf

begindocument
Here is normal text.
hindi नमस्ते
enddocument


However, I'm using a program that outputs the tex and that won't allow me to type the Hindi script into my tex editor; instead, it will only give me the unicode version of the word, "नमस्ते", which is "<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>".



How can I get luatex to compile correctly from these raw code characters? What I want to compile (to produce a pdf with the single word "नमस्ते") is something like this:



documentclassarticle
usepackagefontspec
setmainfontTimes New Roman
newfontscriptDevanagarideva,dev2
newfontfacehindi[Script=Devanagari]Lohit-Devanagari.ttf

begindocument
Here is normal text.
hindi <U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>
enddocument


...but that won't work.










share|improve this question
















I can get the following code to compile, using luatex, with the Hindi/Devanagari characters correctly printed in the pdf:



documentclassarticle
usepackagefontspec
setmainfontTimes New Roman
newfontscriptDevanagarideva,dev2
newfontfacehindi[Script=Devanagari]Lohit-Devanagari.ttf

begindocument
Here is normal text.
hindi नमस्ते
enddocument


However, I'm using a program that outputs the tex and that won't allow me to type the Hindi script into my tex editor; instead, it will only give me the unicode version of the word, "नमस्ते", which is "<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>".



How can I get luatex to compile correctly from these raw code characters? What I want to compile (to produce a pdf with the single word "नमस्ते") is something like this:



documentclassarticle
usepackagefontspec
setmainfontTimes New Roman
newfontscriptDevanagarideva,dev2
newfontfacehindi[Script=Devanagari]Lohit-Devanagari.ttf

begindocument
Here is normal text.
hindi <U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>
enddocument


...but that won't work.







fonts luatex languages characters indic






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 29 mins ago









ShreevatsaR

28.2k873102




28.2k873102










asked 3 hours ago









lethalSingerlethalSinger

203




203












  • Can you get your program to output char"0928char"092Echar"0938char"094Dchar"0924 char"0947 instead of <U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>?

    – Mico
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    Yes, I could do that! What would the full script then need to look like?

    – lethalSinger
    2 hours ago











  • I'm afraid I cannot answer your question as I don't know which scripting tool you employ. I just posted an answer, though, which creates a Lua function that converts <U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947> to char"0928char"092Echar"0938char"094Dchar"0924 char"0947.

    – Mico
    2 hours ago

















  • Can you get your program to output char"0928char"092Echar"0938char"094Dchar"0924 char"0947 instead of <U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>?

    – Mico
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    Yes, I could do that! What would the full script then need to look like?

    – lethalSinger
    2 hours ago











  • I'm afraid I cannot answer your question as I don't know which scripting tool you employ. I just posted an answer, though, which creates a Lua function that converts <U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947> to char"0928char"092Echar"0938char"094Dchar"0924 char"0947.

    – Mico
    2 hours ago
















Can you get your program to output char"0928char"092Echar"0938char"094Dchar"0924 char"0947 instead of <U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>?

– Mico
2 hours ago





Can you get your program to output char"0928char"092Echar"0938char"094Dchar"0924 char"0947 instead of <U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>?

– Mico
2 hours ago




1




1





Yes, I could do that! What would the full script then need to look like?

– lethalSinger
2 hours ago





Yes, I could do that! What would the full script then need to look like?

– lethalSinger
2 hours ago













I'm afraid I cannot answer your question as I don't know which scripting tool you employ. I just posted an answer, though, which creates a Lua function that converts <U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947> to char"0928char"092Echar"0938char"094Dchar"0924 char"0947.

– Mico
2 hours ago





I'm afraid I cannot answer your question as I don't know which scripting tool you employ. I just posted an answer, though, which creates a Lua function that converts <U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947> to char"0928char"092Echar"0938char"094Dchar"0924 char"0947.

– Mico
2 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















3














(added an extra operation in the Lua function 'conv' to address the OP's follow-up request)



Since you're using LuaLaTeX, here's a solution that employs a Lua function to convert strings of the form '<U%+(.-)>' to '\char"%1'; here, %+ represents the literal character + and %1 represents the non-greedy "capture" of the pattern (.-) -- in words: "0 or more characters other than >". In a second step, the Lua function converts any whitespace characters present in the string to explicit (interword) whitespace.



In addition, the code also sets up a LaTeX macro that acts as a front-end for the Lua function. Thus, one may call the Lua function via a conv<your string here> directive.



You can either manually encase the sequences of unicode code in conv... statements or, depending on how far you can get your program to do the work for you, instruct the scripting program to encase the sequences of unicode code in a conv... statements automatically.



enter image description here



documentclassarticle
usepackagefontspec
setmainfontTimes New Roman
newfontscriptDevanagarideva,dev2
newfontfacehindi[Script=Devanagari]Lohit-Devanagari.ttf

%%%% -- copy the next eight lines of code to your document --
usepackageluacode % for 'luacode' env. and 'luastringN' macro
beginluacode


function conv ( s ) 
s = s:gsub ( '<U%+(.-)>' , '\char"%1' )
tex.sprint ( ( s:gsub( '%s+' , '\ ' ) ) )
end


endluacode
newcommandconv[1]directluaconv(luastringN#1)

begindocument
Latin-alphabet text.

hindi नमस्ते

hindi conv<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>

hindi conv<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947> <U+0930><U+093E><U+091C>
enddocument





share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    This gets incredibly close. The only problem now is with breaks between words, which get ignored. E.g. "नमस्ते राज" (2 words) gets printed as "नमस्तेराज" (1 single word) even though there is the proper space between the unicode characters: "<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947> <U+0930><U+093E><U+091C>". How can I fix the spacing issue?

    – lethalSinger
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    @lethalSinger - Please see the updated answer I just posted. (The solution is to add a second gsub (short for "global substitution") operation.)

    – Mico
    45 mins ago












Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "85"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f485697%2foutput-devanagari-hindi-from-raw-unicode-using-luatex%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









3














(added an extra operation in the Lua function 'conv' to address the OP's follow-up request)



Since you're using LuaLaTeX, here's a solution that employs a Lua function to convert strings of the form '<U%+(.-)>' to '\char"%1'; here, %+ represents the literal character + and %1 represents the non-greedy "capture" of the pattern (.-) -- in words: "0 or more characters other than >". In a second step, the Lua function converts any whitespace characters present in the string to explicit (interword) whitespace.



In addition, the code also sets up a LaTeX macro that acts as a front-end for the Lua function. Thus, one may call the Lua function via a conv<your string here> directive.



You can either manually encase the sequences of unicode code in conv... statements or, depending on how far you can get your program to do the work for you, instruct the scripting program to encase the sequences of unicode code in a conv... statements automatically.



enter image description here



documentclassarticle
usepackagefontspec
setmainfontTimes New Roman
newfontscriptDevanagarideva,dev2
newfontfacehindi[Script=Devanagari]Lohit-Devanagari.ttf

%%%% -- copy the next eight lines of code to your document --
usepackageluacode % for 'luacode' env. and 'luastringN' macro
beginluacode


function conv ( s ) 
s = s:gsub ( '<U%+(.-)>' , '\char"%1' )
tex.sprint ( ( s:gsub( '%s+' , '\ ' ) ) )
end


endluacode
newcommandconv[1]directluaconv(luastringN#1)

begindocument
Latin-alphabet text.

hindi नमस्ते

hindi conv<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>

hindi conv<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947> <U+0930><U+093E><U+091C>
enddocument





share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    This gets incredibly close. The only problem now is with breaks between words, which get ignored. E.g. "नमस्ते राज" (2 words) gets printed as "नमस्तेराज" (1 single word) even though there is the proper space between the unicode characters: "<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947> <U+0930><U+093E><U+091C>". How can I fix the spacing issue?

    – lethalSinger
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    @lethalSinger - Please see the updated answer I just posted. (The solution is to add a second gsub (short for "global substitution") operation.)

    – Mico
    45 mins ago
















3














(added an extra operation in the Lua function 'conv' to address the OP's follow-up request)



Since you're using LuaLaTeX, here's a solution that employs a Lua function to convert strings of the form '<U%+(.-)>' to '\char"%1'; here, %+ represents the literal character + and %1 represents the non-greedy "capture" of the pattern (.-) -- in words: "0 or more characters other than >". In a second step, the Lua function converts any whitespace characters present in the string to explicit (interword) whitespace.



In addition, the code also sets up a LaTeX macro that acts as a front-end for the Lua function. Thus, one may call the Lua function via a conv<your string here> directive.



You can either manually encase the sequences of unicode code in conv... statements or, depending on how far you can get your program to do the work for you, instruct the scripting program to encase the sequences of unicode code in a conv... statements automatically.



enter image description here



documentclassarticle
usepackagefontspec
setmainfontTimes New Roman
newfontscriptDevanagarideva,dev2
newfontfacehindi[Script=Devanagari]Lohit-Devanagari.ttf

%%%% -- copy the next eight lines of code to your document --
usepackageluacode % for 'luacode' env. and 'luastringN' macro
beginluacode


function conv ( s ) 
s = s:gsub ( '<U%+(.-)>' , '\char"%1' )
tex.sprint ( ( s:gsub( '%s+' , '\ ' ) ) )
end


endluacode
newcommandconv[1]directluaconv(luastringN#1)

begindocument
Latin-alphabet text.

hindi नमस्ते

hindi conv<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>

hindi conv<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947> <U+0930><U+093E><U+091C>
enddocument





share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    This gets incredibly close. The only problem now is with breaks between words, which get ignored. E.g. "नमस्ते राज" (2 words) gets printed as "नमस्तेराज" (1 single word) even though there is the proper space between the unicode characters: "<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947> <U+0930><U+093E><U+091C>". How can I fix the spacing issue?

    – lethalSinger
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    @lethalSinger - Please see the updated answer I just posted. (The solution is to add a second gsub (short for "global substitution") operation.)

    – Mico
    45 mins ago














3












3








3







(added an extra operation in the Lua function 'conv' to address the OP's follow-up request)



Since you're using LuaLaTeX, here's a solution that employs a Lua function to convert strings of the form '<U%+(.-)>' to '\char"%1'; here, %+ represents the literal character + and %1 represents the non-greedy "capture" of the pattern (.-) -- in words: "0 or more characters other than >". In a second step, the Lua function converts any whitespace characters present in the string to explicit (interword) whitespace.



In addition, the code also sets up a LaTeX macro that acts as a front-end for the Lua function. Thus, one may call the Lua function via a conv<your string here> directive.



You can either manually encase the sequences of unicode code in conv... statements or, depending on how far you can get your program to do the work for you, instruct the scripting program to encase the sequences of unicode code in a conv... statements automatically.



enter image description here



documentclassarticle
usepackagefontspec
setmainfontTimes New Roman
newfontscriptDevanagarideva,dev2
newfontfacehindi[Script=Devanagari]Lohit-Devanagari.ttf

%%%% -- copy the next eight lines of code to your document --
usepackageluacode % for 'luacode' env. and 'luastringN' macro
beginluacode


function conv ( s ) 
s = s:gsub ( '<U%+(.-)>' , '\char"%1' )
tex.sprint ( ( s:gsub( '%s+' , '\ ' ) ) )
end


endluacode
newcommandconv[1]directluaconv(luastringN#1)

begindocument
Latin-alphabet text.

hindi नमस्ते

hindi conv<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>

hindi conv<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947> <U+0930><U+093E><U+091C>
enddocument





share|improve this answer















(added an extra operation in the Lua function 'conv' to address the OP's follow-up request)



Since you're using LuaLaTeX, here's a solution that employs a Lua function to convert strings of the form '<U%+(.-)>' to '\char"%1'; here, %+ represents the literal character + and %1 represents the non-greedy "capture" of the pattern (.-) -- in words: "0 or more characters other than >". In a second step, the Lua function converts any whitespace characters present in the string to explicit (interword) whitespace.



In addition, the code also sets up a LaTeX macro that acts as a front-end for the Lua function. Thus, one may call the Lua function via a conv<your string here> directive.



You can either manually encase the sequences of unicode code in conv... statements or, depending on how far you can get your program to do the work for you, instruct the scripting program to encase the sequences of unicode code in a conv... statements automatically.



enter image description here



documentclassarticle
usepackagefontspec
setmainfontTimes New Roman
newfontscriptDevanagarideva,dev2
newfontfacehindi[Script=Devanagari]Lohit-Devanagari.ttf

%%%% -- copy the next eight lines of code to your document --
usepackageluacode % for 'luacode' env. and 'luastringN' macro
beginluacode


function conv ( s ) 
s = s:gsub ( '<U%+(.-)>' , '\char"%1' )
tex.sprint ( ( s:gsub( '%s+' , '\ ' ) ) )
end


endluacode
newcommandconv[1]directluaconv(luastringN#1)

begindocument
Latin-alphabet text.

hindi नमस्ते

hindi conv<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947>

hindi conv<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947> <U+0930><U+093E><U+091C>
enddocument






share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 41 mins ago

























answered 2 hours ago









MicoMico

287k32393781




287k32393781







  • 1





    This gets incredibly close. The only problem now is with breaks between words, which get ignored. E.g. "नमस्ते राज" (2 words) gets printed as "नमस्तेराज" (1 single word) even though there is the proper space between the unicode characters: "<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947> <U+0930><U+093E><U+091C>". How can I fix the spacing issue?

    – lethalSinger
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    @lethalSinger - Please see the updated answer I just posted. (The solution is to add a second gsub (short for "global substitution") operation.)

    – Mico
    45 mins ago













  • 1





    This gets incredibly close. The only problem now is with breaks between words, which get ignored. E.g. "नमस्ते राज" (2 words) gets printed as "नमस्तेराज" (1 single word) even though there is the proper space between the unicode characters: "<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947> <U+0930><U+093E><U+091C>". How can I fix the spacing issue?

    – lethalSinger
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    @lethalSinger - Please see the updated answer I just posted. (The solution is to add a second gsub (short for "global substitution") operation.)

    – Mico
    45 mins ago








1




1





This gets incredibly close. The only problem now is with breaks between words, which get ignored. E.g. "नमस्ते राज" (2 words) gets printed as "नमस्तेराज" (1 single word) even though there is the proper space between the unicode characters: "<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947> <U+0930><U+093E><U+091C>". How can I fix the spacing issue?

– lethalSinger
2 hours ago





This gets incredibly close. The only problem now is with breaks between words, which get ignored. E.g. "नमस्ते राज" (2 words) gets printed as "नमस्तेराज" (1 single word) even though there is the proper space between the unicode characters: "<U+0928><U+092E><U+0938><U+094D><U+0924><U+0947> <U+0930><U+093E><U+091C>". How can I fix the spacing issue?

– lethalSinger
2 hours ago




1




1





@lethalSinger - Please see the updated answer I just posted. (The solution is to add a second gsub (short for "global substitution") operation.)

– Mico
45 mins ago






@lethalSinger - Please see the updated answer I just posted. (The solution is to add a second gsub (short for "global substitution") operation.)

– Mico
45 mins ago


















draft saved

draft discarded
















































Thanks for contributing an answer to TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f485697%2foutput-devanagari-hindi-from-raw-unicode-using-luatex%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Nidaros erkebispedøme

Birsay

Where did Arya get these scars? Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Favourite questions and answers from the 1st quarter of 2019Why did Arya refuse to end it?Has the pronunciation of Arya Stark's name changed?Has Arya forgiven people?Why did Arya Stark lose her vision?Why can Arya still use the faces?Has the Narrow Sea become narrower?Does Arya Stark know how to make poisons outside of the House of Black and White?Why did Nymeria leave Arya?Why did Arya not kill the Lannister soldiers she encountered in the Riverlands?What is the current canonical age of Sansa, Bran and Arya Stark?