Pango-1.21.1 released [unstable]



Pango-1.19.0 is now available for download at:

  http://download.gnome.org/sources/pango/1.21/
or
  ftp://ftp.gtk.org/pub/pango/1.21

48efc23338ac4b359bee7348652e6107  pango-1.21.1.tar.bz2
ac5c3f8bc6a8be174311ce58fc4121ea  pango-1.21.1.tar.gz

This is a development release in yet another exciting cycle
in Pango development, leading to Pango-1.22.0, which will be
released just in time for GNOME 2.24.


Notes:

 * This is unstable development release. While it has had
   fairly extensive testing, there are likely bugs
   remaining to be found. This release should not be used
   in production.

 * Installing this version will overwrite your existing
   copy of Pango. If you have problems, you'll need
   to reinstall Pango-1.20.x

 * Bugs should be reported to http://bugzilla.gnome.org.

About Pango
===========

Pango is a library for layout and rendering of text, with an emphasis
on internationalization. Pango can be used anywhere that text layout
is needed, though most of the work on Pango so far has been done in
the context of the GTK+ widget toolkit. Pango forms the core of text
and font handling for GTK+-2.x.

Pango is designed to be modular; the core Pango layout engine can
be used with different font backends. There are three basic backends,
with multiple options for rendering with each.

 - Client side fonts using the FreeType and fontconfig libraries.
   Rendering can be with with Cairo or Xft libraries, or directly
   to an in-memory buffer with no additional libraries.

 - Native fonts on Microsoft Windows using Uniscribe for
   complex-text handling. Rendering can be done via Cairo or
   directly using the native Win32 API.

 - Native fonts on MacOS X, rendering via Cairo.

The integration of Pango with Cairo (http://cairographics.org)
provides a complete solution with high quality text handling
and graphics rendering.

Dynamically loaded modules then handle text layout for particular
combinations of script and font backend. Pango ships with a wide
selection of modules, including modules for Hebrew, Arabic,
Hangul, Thai, and a number of Indic scripts. Virtually all of the
world's major scripts are supported.

As well as the low level layout rendering routines, Pango includes
PangoLayout, a high level driver for laying out entire blocks of text,
and routines to assist in editing internationalized text.

More information about Pango is available from http://www.pango.org/.
Bugs should be reported to http://bugzilla.gnome.org.

Pango 1.21 depends on version 2.14.0 or newer of the GLib
library and version 1.6.4 or newer of the cairo library (if the
cairo backend is desired); more information about GLib and cairo
can be found at http://www.gtk.org/ and http://cairographics.org/
respectively.

Overview of changes between 1.21.0 and 1.21.1
==============================================
- Partial work to make pango_break() exactly follow Unicode TR#14 and TR#29.
  The Grapheme Boundaries and Word Boundaries now work.  For word boundaries,
  a new member was added to PangoLogAttr.  Sentence Boundaries and Line Breaks
  to follow in the next release.
- Err if no cairo font backends font
- Misc bug fixes
- New public API:
	Add new PangoLogAttr member is_word_boundary, that implements UAX#29's
	Word Boundaries semantics.  The is_word_start and is_word_end members
	will change implementation later on to be consitent with the word
	boundaries.

- Bugs fixed in this release:
	Bug 531242 – Leak when calculating win32 font coverage
		Patch from Daniel Atallah
	Bug 530757 – Docs build breaks because of hash sign in URL in <ulink...>
	Bug 530685 – Pango no longer using cairo as a backend as of pango 1.19.4
	Part of Bug 97545 – Make pango_default_break follow Unicode TR #29

13 May 2008
Behdad Esfahbod

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