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pfb2pfa(1) [redhat man page]

PFB2PFA(1)						      General Commands Manual							PFB2PFA(1)

NAME
pfb2pfa - convert a type1 pfb file (binary MSDOS) into a pfa (ASCII) SYNOPSIS
pfb2pfa [-v] pfbfile [pfafile] DESCRIPTION
Program converts a binary MSDOS representation for a type1 PostScript font into a readable ASCII version. The MSDOS newline ( ) is con- verted into the UNIX newline ( ). The output is written in a file whose name is the name that is provided on the command line or the basename of the input file plus extension ".pfa". With the -v option you get some information about what the program is doing. AUTHOR
Piet Tutelaers rcpt@urc.tue.nl TeX PFB2PFA(1)

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PS2PK(1)						      General Commands Manual							  PS2PK(1)

NAME
ps2pk - creates a TeX pkfont from a type1 PostScript font SYNOPSIS
ps2pk [ -v ] [ -eenc ] [ -Xxres ] [ -Eexpansion ] [ -Sslant ] [ -Ppointsize ] [ -Rbaseres ] [ -raspectratio ] [ -Yyres ] [ -aAFMfile ] [ -mmodename ] type1 [pkfont] DESCRIPTION
This program renders a given type1 PostScript font at a given pointsize (default 10.0 points) and resolution (default 300dpi) into a TeX pkfont. To generate the pkfont ps2pk needs a valid type1 font file (for example Utopia-Regular, Utopia-Regula.pfb or Utopia-Regula.pfa) and its corresponding AFM-file (Utopia-Regular.afm) with the font metrics. The program accepts both the binary type1 format (Utopia-Regula.pfb) and its ASCII equivalent (Utopia-Regular or Utopia-Regula.pfa). To locate the files, ps2pk uses the kpathsea library (see the info page on kpathsea). Additionally, pfb and pfa files are searched for in the directory specified in the environment variable T1INPUTS, and afm files are searched in AFMFONTS, if they are set (the -v flag will report which filenames are looked for). The program will make a pkfont in which the character codes are derived from their AFM (Adobe Font Metrics) defined values. This can be overruled by specifying an explicit encoding file via the -e option. The encoding file enc should contain a valid PostScript encoding con- taining PostScript names like /hyphen. Here is an incomplete example (see afm2tfm for complete syntax): % This is the EC encoding. /ECEncoding [ % now 256 chars follow % 0x00 /grave /acute /circumflex /tilde /dieresis /hungarumlaut /ring /caron /breve /macron /dotaccent /cedilla /ogonek /quotesinglbase /guilsinglleft /guilsinglright (Rest of lines omitted.) % 0xF0 /eth /ntilde /ograve /oacute /ocircumflex /otilde /odieresis /oe /oslash /ugrave /uacute /ucircumflex /udieresis /yacute /thorn /germandbls ] def Options and arguments: -aAFMfile Overrules the name that is used to locate the AFM file. -eenc Name of a file containing an encoding scheme (default - the encoding named in the AFM-file is used). The actual PostScript name of the encoding scheme is written as a "special" at the end of the pkfont. -Eextension The extension factor (real value, default 1.0). -mmodename A modename such as would be used by METAFONT (default "Unknown mode"). -Ppointsize The desired pointsize (real value, default 10.0 points). -Rbaseres The desired base resolution (integer value, default 300 dpi). If this differs from the value of xres, the appropriate magnifi- cation will be shown in the "specials" at the end of the pkfont. If possible, this will be expressed as a magstep, otherwise as a real number. For example, a pkfont with an xres of 329, using the default base resolution of 300, will include the "special" text "mag=magstep(0.5)" at the end of the font. -raspectratio The desired aspect ratio (expression, integerY/integerX, default 300/300). This will be shown in the "specials" at the end of the pkfont. Setting the aspect ratio creates a value for yres but an explicit yres value will take precedence. Argument must be in "" if spaces are left around `/'. -Sslant The slant (real value, default 0.0). -Xxres The resolution in the X direction (integer value, default 300 dpi). -Yyres The resolution in the Y direction (integer value, default the value of xres). If yres differs from xres, a "special" text giv- ing the aspect ratio will be written at the end of the pkfont. -v Verbose flag. (Tells what the program is doing.) type1 The name of the PostScript type1 font. The name of the AFM-file will be constructed from this name by removing the extension (if suplied) and adding ".afm". The PostScript "FontName" is extracted from the AFM-file and written into a "special" at the end of the pkfont. [pkfont] The name of the resulting pkfont can be overruled with this name. The default name of pkfont is derived from the basename of the type1 font, the pointsize and xres. For example `ps2pk -P17.28 Utopia-Regular' will result in `Utopia-Regular17.300pk'. An explicit value for the name of the pkfont is necessary when the type1 font name already shows the point size, otherwise the pointsize value is catenated on to the pkfont basename which is usually not what is wanted. The following PK "specials" provide an internal check on the characteristics of the pkfont, in accordance with the recommendations of the TeX Working Group on the TeX Directory Standard (TWG-TDS): "fontid=FontName", "codingscheme=Encoding", "fontfacebyte", "mag", "mode=(ps2pk)modename", "pixels-per-inch", and "aspect-ratio" if it is other than unity. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
This program uses the type1 hinting and rendering software IBM has donated to the X-consortium. SEE ALSO
`METAFONT: The Program', Donald Knuth. `The GFtoPK processor', belonging to the METAFONTware. `Adobe Font Metric Files', Version 3.0, PostScript Developer Support Group. afm2tfm(1) pk2bm(1) kpsewhich(1) info kpathsea VERSION
1.4 (January 1994) AUTHOR
Piet Tutelaers <rcpt@urc.tue.nl>. Modified for ps2pkm by Pierre A. Mackay <mackay@cs.washington.edu>, This manpage was adapted to teTeX by Frank Kuester <frank@kuesterei.ch>. TeX PS2PK(1)
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