home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: comp.fonts,comp.answers,news.answers
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!xlink.net!howland.reston.ans.net!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!eff!news.kei.com!world!ora.com!norm
- From: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Subject: comp.fonts FAQ: Macintosh Info
- Message-ID: <font-faq-4_759515252@ora.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Summary: This posting answers frequently asked questions about fonts.
- It addresses both general font questions and questions that
- are specific to a particular platform.
- Sender: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Supersedes: <font-faq-4_757281740@ora.com>
- Reply-To: norm@ora.com (Norman Walsh)
- Organization: O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.
- References: <font-faq-1_759515252@ora.com>
- Date: Tue, 25 Jan 1994 16:27:45 GMT
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Expires: Thu, 10 Mar 1994 16:27:32 GMT
- Lines: 341
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.fonts:6513 comp.answers:3559 news.answers:14499
-
- Archive-name: fonts-faq/part4
- Version: 2.0.3
-
- Subject: 2. Macintosh Information
-
- Subject: 2.1. Macintosh Font formats
-
- Postscript Type 1 fonts can be installed on the Macintosh only by using
- accompanying bitmapped fonts.
-
- Postscript Type 3 fonts are installed on the Macintosh in the same way
- that Type 1 fonts are.
-
- Truetype fonts: no bitmapped font is necessary with this type, though
- commonly used sizes are often supplied.
-
- Bitmap fonts: on the Macintosh, bitmap fonts also contain the kerning
- information for a font and must be installed with both type 1 and type
- 3 fonts. Their presence also speeds the display of commonly used font
- sizes.
-
- Subject: 2.2. Frequently Requested Mac Fonts
-
- Many fonts are available at various archives. The king of Macintosh
- font archives is mac.archive.umich.edu. On mac.archive.umich.edu, the
- fonts are located in the following folders:
-
- /mac/system.extensions/font/type1
- /mac/system.extensions/font/type3
- /mac/system.extensions/font/truetype
-
- The following fonts are in Type 1 format for the Macintosh. Some are
- also available in TrueType format.
-
- * Tamil
-
- Paladam, T. Govindram
-
- * Hebrew
-
- ShalomScript, ShalomOldStyle, ShalomStick, Jonathan Brecher
-
- * Japanese
-
- Shorai (Hirigana, with application)
-
- * Star Trek
-
- StarTrekClassic, Star TrekClassicMovies, StarTrekTNGCrille,
- StarTrekTNG Titles, TNG monitors, StarFleet, Klinzai (Klingon font)
-
- * Command-key symbol
-
- Chicago (TrueType or bitmap, key: Ctrl-Q), Chicago Symbols
- (Type3, key: 1), EncycloFont (Type3, key: d)
-
- * Astrologic/Astronomic symbols
-
- Hermetica (Type1), InternationalSymbols (Type 3, Mars and Venus
- only), MortBats (Type3), Zodiac (bitmap)
-
- * IBM OEM Line Drawing Characters
-
- Try Adobe PrestigeElite or Adobe LetterGothic. They have all the
- characters you want, but the `line draw' characters are unencoded
- -- you will need tools to reencode the outline font itself and
- make a new PFM metric files.
-
- Or try IBMExtended from Impramatur Systems in Cambridge, Mass. It
- already is encoded using IBM OEM encoding (some DOS code page).
-
- The IBM version of Courier distributed freely under the X11
- Consortium also contains the appropriate characters. It is
- distributed in PC format, however. Again, the font will have to
- be reencoded for Windows. Appropriate AFM files for this font can
- be obtained from: ibis.cs.umass.edu:/pub/norm/comp.fonts. The
- file is called IBM-Courier-PC8-SymbolSet-AFMs.zip.
-
- Many of these mac fonts are available in files that are either entitled
- xxxx.sit or xxxx.cpt. xxxx.sit files are Stuffit archives. xxxx.cpt
- files are Compact Pro archives. StuffitLite (shareware $25) and Compact
- Pro (shareware $25) are available at the standard ftp sites.
- Uncompressors for these programs (free) are also available at the
- archive sites. Check the utilities/compression utilities folders.
-
- Subject: 2.3. Commercial Font Sources
-
- Commercial fonts can be obtained from a number of different companies,
- including the large font houses: Adobe, Font Haus, Font Company,
- Bitstream, and Monotype. At these companies, fonts cost about $40 for a
- single face, and must be purchased in packages. Adobe, Bitstream, and
- Monotype also sell pre-designated type collections for slightly lower
- prices.
-
- Image Club sells a wide selection of fonts for about $50 for a 4 font
- family.
-
- Other, cheaper companies sell fonts of lesser quality, including
- KeyFonts, which sells a set of 100 fonts for $50 and Casady & Green's
- Fluent Laser Fonts, a set of 79 fonts for $99. Casady & Greene also
- sells Cyrillic language fonts in Times, Bodoni, and Helvetica sell for
- about $40 for each 4 font family.
-
- Foreign language fonts, ranging from Egyptian hieroglyphics to Cyrillic
- can be obtained from Ecological Linguistics.
-
- Please consult the vendor list for a more complete list of vendors.
-
- Subject: 2.4. Mac Font Installation
-
- * System 7
-
- Install the fonts by opening the suitcase containing the bitmap
- file and dropping the fonts into your system suitcase, located
- inside your system folder. You will need to quit all other
- applications before doing this. For a TrueType font, the icon for
- the font will have several letters in it, instead of just one.
- Dropping it into your system suitcase will make all sizes of the
- font available. For Postscript type 1 fonts, you also need to
- place the printer font in the extensions folder in your system
- folder. If you are using ATM you need to place these fonts in the
- root level of your system folder (not inside another folder).
- Using Suitcase, a font management utility, you can avoid
- cluttering your system folder with printer fonts.
-
- You can make new suitcases of fonts (generally not needed, but
- used by those who use Suitcase) by using Font DA mover. It
- operates the same as in system 6, except that the most recent
- version must be used.
-
- * System 6
-
- Bitmap fonts can be installed using Font DA mover to move the
- fonts, located inside suitcases, into your system. You will need
- to restart your computer to make these fonts available. Printer
- fonts must be placed in the system folder, not inside any other
- folder.
-
- Truetype fonts can be used with system 6 if you get the Truetype
- init. Then the fonts can be installed in your system with Font DA
- mover. Suitcase can also be used under system 6.
-
- Subject: 2.5. Mac Font Utilities
-
- * SUITCASE
-
- Suitcase is a nifty little system extension that lets you avoid
- having to install fonts into your system. In system 6, it means
- that you can avoid restarting your system every time you want to
- install a new font.
-
- In system 7, Suitcase lets you avoid quitting all applications
- before making fonts available. Some programs, like Quark Xpress
- will automatically update their font list when you open a new
- suitcase, allowing much more flexibility in opening and closing
- font suitcases and making different sets of fonts available.
-
- Suitcase appears in your Apple menu in both system 7 and 6 and
- allows you to open suitcases, as though they were files, thus
- making the fonts contained in them accessible to programs.
-
- In addition, when suitcase is installed, printer fonts can be
- stored with the bitmap suitcases they correspond to, instead of
- having to drop them into your system folder.
-
- The most recent version of Suitcase is compatible with TrueType.
- Suitcase is about $54 from the mail order places.
-
- * Carpetbag
-
- A shareware program with functionality equivalent to Suitcase.
-
- * MASTER JUGGLER
-
- Claims to do similar things
-
- * ATM
-
- Adobe Type Manager is an Init and Control panel allows accurate
- screen display, at any size of PostScript type 1 fonts. It's
- function is replicated with Truetype (but for different outline
- font format). With it installed, you can print fonts of any size
- to non-PostScript printers. When using ATM, printer fonts must
- either be stored with the bitmap files opened with suitcase (when
- using Suitcase), or they must be stored in the root level of the
- system folder (with System 7.0, printer fonts must be stored in
- the Extension folder if you are not using Suitcase). ATM is now
- available, with the System 7.0 upgrade, as well as directly from
- adobe with 4 Garamond fonts.
-
- ATM is not built into System 7.1 as previously expected. With
- System 7.1, printer fonts must be stored in the Fonts folder if
- you are not using Suitcase.
-
- If you are using version 7.x prior to 7.1, the following hack
- allows you to have a Font folder (if you don't use Suitcase):
-
- Open the second 'DCOD' resource from the ATM 68020/030 file. Do an
- ASCII search for the string "extn" and change it to "font" (it's
- case sensitive). Save, close, and Reboot.
-
- This process should work for 68000 machines using the proper ATM
- file instead.
-
- * Super ATM
-
- This is a utility that will create fonts, on the fly, that match
- the metrics of any Adobe-brand fonts you don't have. It does a
- remarkably good job of mimicry because it uses two "generic"
- Multiple Master typefaces, serif and sans serif to simulate the
- appearance of the missing typefaces. (There is a 1.4 megabyte
- database file that allows Super ATM to simulate the fonts that
- aren't there.) You also get Type On Call (a CD-ROM), which has
- locked outline fonts, and unlocked screen font for all but the
- most recent faces in the Adobe Type library.
-
- * TTconverter
-
- A shareware accessory available at the usual archives will convert
- Truetype fonts for the IBM into Macintosh format.
-
- * Microsoft Font Pack
-
- If you work with a mixture of Macs and PCs running Windows 3.1,
- this is a good deal; 100 TrueType fonts compromising the Windows
- 3.1 standard set and the two Font Packs for Windows. This includes
- various display fonts, the Windows Wingdings font, and the Lucida
- family.
-
- A variety of programs, for example, Font Harmony, etc. will allow you
- to change the names and ID numbers of your fonts.
-
- Fontmonger and Metamorphosis will let you convert fonts among several
- formats (type 1 and 3 and Truetype for the Mac and PC), as well as
- letting you extract the font outlines from the printer fonts.
-
- Subject: 2.6. Making Outline Fonts
-
- This is very, very difficult. Many people imagine that there are
- programs that will simply convert pictures into fonts for them. This is
- not the case; most fonts are painstakingly created by drawing curves
- that closely approximate the letterforms. In addition, special rules
- (which improve hinting, etc.) mandate that these curves be drawn in
- specific ways. Even designing, or merely digitizing, a simple font can
- take hundreds of hours.
-
- Given that, there are two major programs used for font design on the
- Macintosh, Fontographer ($280) and FontStudio ($400). These programs
- will allow you to import scanned images, and then trace them with
- drawing tools. The programs will then generate type 1, 3, TrueType and
- Bitmap fonts for either the Macintosh or the IBM PC. They will also
- generate automatic hinting. They also open previously constructed
- outline fonts, allowing them to be modified, or converted into another
- format.
-
- As far as I know, there are no shareware programs that allow you to
- generate outline fonts.
-
- Subject: 2.7. Problems and Possible Solutions
-
- 1. Another font mysteriously appears when you select a certain font
- for display.
-
- This is often the result of a font id conflict. All fonts on the
- Macintosh are assigned a font id, an integer value. When two fonts
- have the same id, some programs can become confused about the
- appropriate font to use. Microsoft word 4.0 used font id's to
- assign fonts, not their names. Since id's can be different on
- different computers, a word document's font could change when it
- was moved from one computer to another. Other signs of font id
- problems are inappropriate kerning or leading (the space between
- lines of text). Some font ID problems can be resolved by using
- Suitcase, which will reassign font ID's for you, as well as saving
- a font ID file that can be moved from computer to computer to keep
- the id's consistent. Font ID problems can also be solved with
- several type utilities, which will allow you to reassign font
- id's. Most newer programs refer to fonts correctly by name
- instead of id number, which should reduce the frequency of this
- problem.
-
- 2. When using a document written in MSWord 5.0, the font mysteriously
- changes when you switch from your computer at home to work, or
- vice versa.
-
- This is the result of a bug in MSWord 5.0. The MSWord 5.0 updater,
- which can be found at the info-mac archives at sumex (in the demo
- folder), will fix this bug.
-
- Subject: 2.8. Creating Mac screen fonts
-
- Creating Mac screen fonts from Type 1 outlines
- ==============================================
-
- Peter DiCamillo contributes the following public domain solution:
-
- BitFont is a program which will create a bitmapped font from any font
- which can be drawn on your Macintosh. In addition to standard
- bitmapped fonts, it works with Adobe outline fonts when the Adobe Type
- Manager is installed, and works with TrueType? fonts. BitFont will
- also tell you how QuickDraw will draw a given font (bitmapped, ATM, or
- TrueType) and can create a text file describing a font and all its
- characters.
-
- BitFont was written using MPW C version 3.2. It is in the public
- domain and may be freely distributed. The distribution files include
- the source code for BitFont.
-
- Berthold K.P. Horn contributes the following solution.
-
- This is a commercial solution. A font manipulation package from Y&Y
- includes:
-
- AFMtoPFM, PFMtoAFM, AFMtoTFM, TFMtoAFM, AFMtoSCR, SCRtoAFM, TFMtoMET,
- PFBtoPFA, PFAtoPFB, MACtoPFA, PFBtoMAC, REENCODE, MODEX, DOWNLOAD,
- SERIAL, and some other stuff I forget.
-
- To convert PC Type 1 fonts to Macintosh use PFBtoMAC on the outline
- font itself; then use AFMtoSCR to make the Mac `screen font'
- (repository of metric info). You may need to use PFMtoAFM to first make
- AFM file.
-
- To convert Macintosh font to PC Type 1, use MACtoPFA, followed by
- PFAtoPFB. Then run SCRtoAFM on screen font to make AFM file. Finally,
- run AFMtoPFM to make Windows font metric file.
-
- Y&Y are the `TeX without BitMaps' people (see ad in TUGboat):
-
- Y&Y makes DVPSONE, DVIWindo, and fonts, for use with TeX mostly, in
- fully hinted Adobe Type 1 format.
-
- Y&Y, 106 Indian Hill, Carlisle MA 01741 USA
-
- (800) 742-4059
-
- (508) 371-3286 (voice)
-
- (508) 371-2004 (fax)
-
- Mac Screen fonts can be constructed from outline fonts using
- Fontographer, as well.
-
-