SOURCES
Annapurna SIL v1.200
========================

This file describes the source files included with the Annapurna SIL font
family. This information should be distributed along with the Annapurna SIL
fonts and any derivative works.

As a reminder: these source files are Copyright (c) As a reminder: these source
files are Copyright (c) 2004-2015, SIL International (http://scripts.sil.org/)
with Reserved Font Names "Annapurna" and "SIL".
This Font Software is licensed under the SIL Open Font License, Version 1.1.

Note that the primary source files for the fonts are the fonts themselves. They
contain all the important data in the fonts and can be studied and modified
using open font tools such as FontForge and TTX (which can both export to
text-based formats). To make further development easier we provide some
additional files:

## Build folder
Font "*-nosmarts.ttf" files: These font are generated from the FontLab files.
They contain no attachment points nor tables for OpenType or Graphite rendering.

Anchor "*-anchors.xml" files: This is the XML file containing data on anchors
(attachment points) used in creating composite glyphs and OpenType/Graphite
code. This anchor data is present in the .vfb files, but this is a separate,
non-proprietary, text-based source for that information.

Graphite code: See the README.txt file in the graphite folder for details.

OpenType code: The code used to insert OpenType tables into the font is included in
a VOLT font format. See the README.txt file in the VOLT folder for details.

## Design folder
FontLab "*.vfb" files: The .vfb files are FontLab source files and contain all the
glyph outline data for the Annapurna SIL font. Please note that it is not
possible to generate a font from these files that is identical to the final
version, as postprocessing is done on the font after generation from
FontLab.

OpenType "*-designsource.otf" files: These are CFF-flavored OpenType fonts 
containing PostScript-style outlines. These are not intended as installable fonts, 
and we do not support that use. They are provided as a non-proprietary 
source of PostScript-style bzier outlines and can be opened by many font 
design programs, including FontForge.


