What other fonts are available to write in Cyrillic in LaTeX beside T2A, T2B, T2C?
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1The anwers to Cyrillic in (La)TeX, which deal with different ways to use Cyrillic in (La)TeX and their pros and cons, might also help you. – Stefan Kottwitz Mar 08 '11 at 10:58
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For multilingual typesetting it seems plausible to use modern TrueType or OpenType fonts, which often contain glyphs for many Unicode character ranges including Cyrillic. Some of the available fonts were made with TeX in mind or even using the original Knuth's Computer Modern as a basis. Some fonts are already included in TeX distributions.
To load a TTF/OTF font, one needs the XeTeX or LuaTeX engines. A LaTeX interface is provided by the fontspec package.
Here's a list of some relevant fonts in no particular order:
- The Computer Modern Unicode fonts contain many Cyrillic glyphs and are a good choice to substitute the default Computer Modern.
- The Linux Libertine fonts are also commonly used.
- The Liberation fonts are a free metric-compatible (meaning that the characters have same dimensions) alternatives to the Times New Roman, Arial and Courier New families.
- One can also use the Microsoft fonts directly. On non-Windows systems the corefonts pack might be useful (most likely already in your Linux distribution if you use one).
Andrey Vihrov
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1CM Unicode is not intended for latex, I suppose. Only for xelatex and lualatex. – Igor Kotelnikov Mar 08 '11 at 10:56
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@Igor Thanks. I rewrote the text to have better structure and clarity. – Andrey Vihrov Mar 08 '11 at 13:15
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I referenced this question to http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/106789/why-does-usepackaget2afontenc-take-over – Jonathan Komar Apr 04 '13 at 12:33