I've been looking for a long time for a good arabic font that is able
to show all diacritics which take place in qur'anic script. The best
till now was me_Quran which is included in Zekr, but unfortunately it
has restrictions (personal use only). I tried to contact the author,
but there wasn't any reply:( On the other side, there's Scheherazade
font which is very good but lacks some of diacritics (i.e. there's no
difference between iqlaab and ihfaa' -- it only puts ''meem'' below
the ''tanween''). So, if anyone knows where to find a font that is
similar to me_Quran and has all diacritics, please let me know. Thanks
in advance.
I don't think there would be any. Scheherazade supports Arabic as far
as Unicode supports it. There is no support for Iqlab/Ikhfa in Unicode
AFAIK. me_quran uses a wise idea for supporting that. It uses two
special Meems (U+6E2 and U+6ED) after Tanween. See:
1. عَلِيمٌۢ بِذَاتِ
2. أَذِلَّةٌۭ فَٱتَّقُوا۟
Since there is no native support in Unicode, the text me_quran uses,
should have some combination of characters so that it is able to
render different kind of Tanweens (and sometime change Tanween to it's
base diacritic + Meem, as in the case if "عَلِيمٌۢ بِذَاتِ").
Best,
Mohsen.
Maybe not as open source, but commercial. In couple of books I noticed
that there were used fonts which are very similar to me_Quran, with
all diacritics but with a little ''cleaner'' shapes (as Scheherazade)
but sad thing is that I don't now their names. I tried to find out
names, but without success:( One really good example of a nice quranic
font is this: http://www.diwan.com/mishafi/main.htm But, it seems that
use of this font is limited to software with which it comes. No use
for me in that case...
On Nov 11, 4:53 am, "Mohsen Saboorian" <mohs...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Salaam,
>
> I don't think there would be any. Scheherazade supports Arabic as far
> as Unicode supports it. There is no support for Iqlab/Ikhfa in Unicode
> AFAIK. me_quran uses a wise idea for supporting that. It uses two
> special Meems (U+6E2 and U+6ED) after Tanween. See:
> 1. عَلِيمٌۢ بِذَاتِ
> 2. أَذِلَّةٌۭ فَٱتَّقُوا۟
>
> Since there is no native support in Unicode, the text me_quran uses,
> should have some combination of characters so that it is able to
> render different kind of Tanweens (and sometime change Tanween to it's
> base diacritic + Meem, as in the case if "عَلِيمٌۢ بِذَاتِ").
>
> Best,
> Mohsen.
>
I found this font recently:
<http://www.pakdata.com/products/arabicfont>
Though It is not as rich as me_quran.
Download link:
<http://pakdata.com/download/PDMS_Saleem_QuranFont-signed.ttf>
Mohammad
The rendered text is not as similar to Uthman Taha as me_quran is.
me_quran is nicer IMHO.
Did you tried this GPL one: http://mrykacstqurn.wikispaces.com/
Mohsen.
PDMS-Saleem is veeery nice, although it has some problems with
diacritics. Thank you very much:) And yes, I tried mrykacstqurn, it is
my choice for now although I like me_Quran more. With mrykacstqurn
there are some ovelaping (i.e. Alef/hamza with fatha and following
harf ''kaaf'')
I noticed that arabeyes_qr_meor (modified ArabeyesQr) too has all
diacritics, but me_Quran is still nicer. And author is same for both.
There's DecoType Naskh Special which is nice, but as Scheherazade it
lacks some diacritics. There's also fantastic font Nafees but has some
serious issues with hamza and lacks harf ''ha''! Too bad:(
For now, for full quranic text with all diacritics usable are me_Quran
(but restricted), arabeyes_qr_meor (same author) and mrykacstqurn.
If anyone get some news in this regard, please let us know.
Most of these font comes with installation of Ubuntu (B ''xy'' set,
Arabeyes set, Farsi, Diwani etc.) and they have only basic set of
diacritics (no different ''tanweens'' for ''izhaar'' and ''ihfaa'' for
example). These are Unicode fonts and they don't support all
diacritics used in quranic text. Some of them even have problem with
harakaat (at least in OpenOffice and some other apps on Linux) and
leave empty space between letters.
On Nov 12, 7:20 pm, nedi...@gmail.com wrote:
> Assalamu alaykum
>
> what are you thinking about this:http://www.wazu.jp/gallery/Fonts_Arabic.html?
> Which of these fonts are without lack of diactrics?
>
> May Allah bless you.
> Assalamu alaykum
> Nedim
>
> 2007/11/12, meho_r <meho.2...@gmail.com>:
BTW, I heard of Arabtype.ttf font that comes with Vista (or MS Office
2003 proofing tools). Anyone tried it?