

Nothing changed, I still cannot paste combined N̈.Ģ. Again, dieresis appears only after second insertion after N, but now it's not precomposed and appears in wrong position (as expected without ccmp).ģ. Insert the N_dieresiscomb glyph into the text directly from the Glyphs panel – it substituted with just N (the same result as point 1.).ġ. Insert dieresiscomb glyph from the Glyphs panel after the N character one time (double click) – nothing happens, but if I insert it one more time – I finally got the N_dieresiscomb (substituted from ccmp).ģ. Paste the N̈ (combined N + dieresiscomb from ) into the text, Illustrator and Photoshop substitute it to just N letter instead of precomposed N_dieresiscomb glyph (that the tested font is contain).Ģ.


First what i think is the ccmp feature can be the problem, so I check the test font file with and without ccmp (many to one substitution that looks like sub N dieresiscomb by N_dieresiscomb ).ġ. The problem is only in Illustrator and Photoshop. The same time everything works correct in TextEdit, InDesign, and web browsers (in a contenteditable div). I check it on my test font file and on other system fonts. What I see: flat letter without diacritical mark, substituted by application (even if the character is precomposed and defined by ccmp). Shortly: In Photoshop and Illustrator CC 2020, I cannot paste combined characters (or insert precomposed from Glyphs panel) that not defined by Unicode, such as Jacute, N_dieresiscomb, N_macroncomb, etc.Ī) precomposed character if it exist in the font file and defined by liga or ccmp ī) combined letter with accent after that, aligned or not.
