(fontname.info)Filenames for fonts


Next: Long names Prev: Introduction Up: Top
Enter node , (file) or (file)node

2 Filenames for fonts
*********************

In this scheme, names may consist of only the letters (monocase a-z),
numerals (0-9), and underscore.  Having two names which differ only in
case is undesirable, since it results in clashes on common Windows
filesystems.

   Here is the basic scheme (the spaces here are merely for
readability):

      S TT W [V...] [N] [E] [DD]

where

S
     represents the supplier of the font.

TT
     represents the typeface name.

W
     represents the weight.

V...
     represents the variant(s), and is omitted if both it and the width
     are normal.  Many fonts have more than one variant.

N
     represents the encoding, and is omitted if the encoding is
     nonstandard.  Encodings are subsumed in the section on variants
     (Note: Variants).

E
     represents the width ("expansion"), and is omitted if it is normal.

DD
     represents the design size (in decimal), and is omitted if the
     font is linearly scaled.  Mittelbach in `TUGboat' 13(1) proposes
     using hexadecimal or base-36 notation.  In my opinion, the
     increased range does not make up for the unreadability of the
     common sizes (e.g., 10pt fonts would have a suffix `a' (in hex),
     or `j' (in base 36)).


   We used to try to limit font names to eight characters.  This was
never completely possible, and since DOS filesystems have become rare,
it's no longer an issue.

   The weight, variants, and width are probably all best taken from the
original name of the font, instead of trying to relate them to some
external standard.

Suppliers
Typefaces
Weights
Variants
Widths

automatically generated by info2www version 1.2.2.9