Assamese Rohini: Font |link|

You installed it, but Microsoft Word or Photoshop doesn't list "Rohini". Solution:

Rohini was created by Sanchayan Goswami (and contributors) around 2014–2016 as part of the larger Assamese OpenType Font project , later adopted by Google Fonts and SIL International -styled initiatives. assamese rohini font

| Feature | Rohini | Nirmala UI | SolaimanLipi | Lohit Assamese | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | | Assamese-specific glyphs (ৰ, ৱ) | Excellent | Good | Poor (Bengali style) | Good | | Conjunct shaping | Excellent | Very Good | Fair | Good | | Open-source | Yes (OFL) | No (Proprietary) | GPL | Yes (OFL) | | Screen readability | High | Very High | Medium | Medium | | Print quality | High | Medium | High | Medium | | Availability | Free | Included in Windows | Free | Free | You installed it, but Microsoft Word or Photoshop

For nearly a decade after Unicode adoption (circa 2005-2010), Assamese typography was in chaos. Most newspapers used proprietary non-Unicode fonts. If you opened a document on a friend's computer, the entire text turned into boxes (tofu) or gibberish. Most newspapers used proprietary non-Unicode fonts

: Like most modern Assamese fonts (e.g., ASOTBidisha or Banikanta ), Rohini is typically built on the Unicode standard. This ensures that text remains readable across different devices and platforms.