This devanagari font devnag is a Metafont font, developed by Frans Velthuis, and his package is called ``Devanagari for TeX''.
The devnag font is in a archive named devnag or devanagari. It is available at all CTAN TEX archives in the languages directory. At the time of writing this document (2001), it was certainly available at ftp.cdrom.com, ctan.tug.org, and many other sites. Please use your Internet search tools to locate the CTAN site closest to you for downloading the devnag archive.
This font is not bundled with the itrans package, but is available at many FTP sites, including in the texlive package.
This ITRANS package make use of Velthuis's Devanagari for TeX package, version 2.15 (released 2008). This contains a change from the previous 1.6 version - the font family dvnb is used instead of dvng. This is required to get the correct j~na and GYa consonant variations.
Devnag also has another Metafont file (dvpn10.mf) which generates a variation of the Devnag font. If you have Metafont on your system, you may use it to generate the PK and TFM files for TEX. This variation was developed by Thomas Ridgeway, and in his words, it is ``a trivial variation of dvnb10.mf to resemble devanagari written with an ordinary writing pen''. Looks nice.
Note that the dvpn10.mf file alone is insufficient to generate the TEX font, the complete devnag package is required to make it usable. And, you must know enough about Metafont to run it.
Important: itrans does not automatically handle all the ligatures present in the devnag font. The Devnag font does contain many three- and four- consonant ligatures, most of which are not currently supported using itrans. See the section titled ``Limitations'' for more details.
HTML interface is supported using this font, Unicode (UTF-8) is supported for this the Devanagari script, but no Unicode fonts are included with the ITRANS package.
Since this is a TEX font, this interface cannot be used as is for HTML. But, Sandeep Sibal, developer of the Jtrans package, has made available a font named Xdvng, which is derived from the dvng/dvnb fonts, and which allows use of Xdvng with the direct Text HTML output mode of ITRANS. See the example files for HTML output in the ITRANS doc directory (ITRANS/doc/s1html.itx); the IFM file to use is named xdvng.ifm. The IFM file has been developed by Sandeep Sibal, and the Xdvng font (available for multiple platforms) has been developed by Sandeep Sibal and Arun Gupta See http://www.sibal.com/sandeep/jtrans/ for info on Sandeep Sibal's Jtrans package.
IFM file to use is named udvng.ifm.
Unicode (UTF-8) output is supported for this the Devanagari script, but no Unicode fonts are included with the ITRANS package. There are many Unicode fonts available on the Web, and more are being developed so it should be easy to locate a Unicode font when needed. Not all Unicode fonts fully support Indian Languages yet.
The IFM file dvng.ifm can be used for Sanskrit, Hindi or Marathi output.
The marathi form of ra-half is available through the R character and the second LA is at L (or ld), etc. The tables (1 and 7) display the complete mapping from English to Devanagari for all the three Indic Scripts.
A second IFM file is also provided, dvngfull.ifm, and is meant to be used for text that needs to use many archaic consonant conjunct forms. Use this file only if you really need all the consonant conjuncts; in most cases a smaller set of consonant conjuncts, as defined by the dvng.ifm file suffices. The tables that follow include information on which conjunct glyphs are available using which IFM file. dvng.ifm file is the one most commonly used, since this has the ``best'' set of ligatures.
2009-12-04
ITRANS Home Page: http://www.aczoom.com/itrans/