InPage is a word
processor and page layout software for languages such as Urdu, Persian, Pashto and Arabic under Windows and
Mac which was first developed in 1994. It is primarily used for creating pages
in the language of Urdu, using the Nasta`līq (نستعلیق)
('hanging' calligraphic) style of Arabic script. As a de facto standard
Urdu publishing tool, InPage is widely used on PCs where the user wishes to
create their documents in Urdu, using the authentic style of Nastaliq with a
vast ligature library (more than 20,000),
while keeping the display of characters on screen WYSIWYG (What-You-See-Is-What-You-Get).
Overall, this makes the on-screen and printed results more 'faithful' to
hand-written calligraphy than all or most other Urdu software on the market.
This is achieved while keeping the operation easy, akin to that of earlier versions
of standard English Desktop Publishing packages such as QuarkXPress and Adobe
InDesign.
Before being used within InPage, the Noori
style of Nastaliq, which was first created as a digital typeface (font) in 1981
through the collaboration of Mirza
Ahmad Jamil TI (as calligrapher) and Monotype Imaging (formerly Monotype
Corp.), suffered from two problems in the 1990s: a) its non-availability on
standard platforms such as Windows or Mac, and b) the non-WYSIWYG nature of
text entry, whereby the document had to be created by commands in Monotype's
proprietary page description language.
In 1994, an Indian software development team -
Concept Software Pvt Ltd,[1] led by
Rarendra Singh & Vijay Gupta, with the collaboration of a UK company called
Multilingual Solutions [2] led by
Kamran Rouhi, developed InPage Urdu for Pakistan's newspaper industry, who up
until that time had been using large teams of calligraphers to hand-write last
minute corrections to text created under Monotype's proprietary system. The
Noori Nastaliq typeface was licensed for InPage from Monotype & augmented
for use as the main Urdu font in this software, along with 40 other
non-Nastaliq fonts.
InPage is reported to be in use on millions of
PCs in Pakistan & India (mainly illegal pirated version). It has also been
widely marketed & sold legally in the UK and India since 1994.[citation needed]
InPage launched its Version 3 at ITCN
exhibition Asia in Karachi, Pakistan, held in August 2008. This version is
Unicode based, supports more Languages, and other Nastaliq fonts with Kasheeda
have been added to it along with compatibility with OpenType Unicode fonts. In
addition to Arabic, Saraiki, Urdu, Persian & Pashto, other languages of the
region, such as Sindhi and Hazaragi can be handled in InPage.
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