Luca Ventura
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The font team informs, the font used is a Japanese font, developed by Coji Morishita. Even though it has Latin and Cyrillic glyphs in it, it’s displayed in the Japanese section in the font list, and has a preview rendered in Japanese (when no text is selected and 'Show Font Names in English' is disabled in Preferences > Type.
CJK fonts, such as this one, allow to break one character per word, and this extends to Cyrillic glyphs these might have, even with the correct language is picked in Character panel.
The team is considering to treat Cyrillic like non-CJK when the CJK font's Cyrillic is not full-width, but currently sees it as a narrow case.
Luca Ventura shared this idea · -
14 votes
It turns out the file in the original report has a singular Latin 'o' mixed into the Cyrillic text, and this makes it break without a hyphen.
The font team notifies that Unicode standart prescribes to not break between two scripts that use spaces as word breaks, so this problem can fixed sometimes later, when the team revises their reflow strategy.
As for now, be notified it’s a very narrow case, and is a good sign that your text has homoglyphs in it.
An error occurred while saving the comment An error occurred while saving the comment Luca Ventura commentedHere a sample file: it seems this issue affects expecially cyrillic, but only in certain fonts.
Indesign handles it correctly.
To avoid this, I've made a script that assign the "no break" attribute to every word in a selected paragraph.An error occurred while saving the comment Luca Ventura commentedIt is truly a disaster. Working with packaging in different languages, I experience this problem very often. I am forced to format the text in indesign, convert it to paths and paste it into Illustrator...
Luca Ventura supported this idea ·
here's the script!