Variants include typeface variations (e.g., italic, sans serif), and font encodings (e.g., Adobe standard, TeX text).
A fontname may require multiple variants. To resolve the worst
ambiguities, we specify that any encoding variant (7
, 8
,
or 9
, see below) come last and any other numeral variant come
first (to avoid confusion with a design size). We recommend but do not
require that the other variants be given in alphabetical order. (It's
not required because it's too painful to implement the sorting in
TeX, and many existing names already have non-alphabetized variants.)
The letterspacing possibilities introduced by fontinst
and
virtual fonts have not yet become sufficiently widespread to make
standardization beneficial. Likewise for the many possible ways to
generate small caps fonts.
Notes on specific variants, both old and new:
1
4
6
b
b
, to avoid
too-long names; and for the others, to avoid variant vs. design-size
ambiguities.
g
h
5
6
7
8
9
7
is for 7-bit encodings, 8
is for 8-bit
encodings, and 9
is for expertised encodings with or without
oldstyle digits (see the x
item below), but this is not an
absolute rule. Also, 5
is presently used for phonetic encodings
and 6
for Cyrillic encodings. The 9s
(SuperFont
)
variant contain all of Adobe, Latin 1, and Expert glyphs, perhaps with
slightly different metrics than the original fonts.
For a font to be named with a certain encoding variant, it's not
necessary that all the characters appear in precisely the same positions
as in the encoding definition. It's enough that the usual TeX macros
work. In practice, this means that it's ok for a font to be labelled
7t
if the only difference from Computer Modern is that the
ligatures and the lslash
and Lslash
characters are
different, since it's impossible to access or change the ligature table
from TeX. Standard PostScript fonts don't have an lslash
character the way Computer Modern does, but they do have the
Lslash
and lslash
characters themselves, so the usual
TeX \lslash
and \Lslash
macros can be made to work via
ligatures. See the file T1.etx
file in the fontinst
distribution for details.
If a name does not contain a specific encoding variant, its encoding is
unspecified. For example, some of the fonts distributed with Dvips(k)
have names like ptmr
for Times-Roman
; they use the Dvips
encoding (see dvips), which is close to (but not the same
as) the TeX text encoding (as in Computer Modern Roman). Similarly,
the TFM files distributed with Dvilj(k) for the builtin LaserJet 4 fonts
have names like cunm
, since these fonts, while compatible with
TeX text, contain many additional characters.
9
x
(and possibly j
)
followed by a two-character regular variant makes some names too long.
That is, 9t
is equivalent in meaning to x7t
, and 9d
is equivalent to jx7t
. (This may not be true for all
9
x
encodings, though.)
k
z
m
v
y
7m
(see texmital), 7v
(see texmext), and 7y
(see texmsym).
n
r
r
or a design size is
present. I.e., r
is only used as a placeholder. When the normal
version of the typeface is sans serif (e.g., Helvetica), r
should
be used when necessary, not s
. Use s
only when the
typeface family has both serif and sans serif variants.
s
t
LucidaSans
(see Typefaces) and a few others are
exceptions, to avoid too-long names.
x
8x
9?
8x
indicates a font in the Expert
encoding itself.
x
indicates an expertised font, i.e., a composite (virtual)
font that includes characters from an 8x
font. And in fact an
x
ee
sequence is replaced by 9
e
, to save
characters.
Fontname 1 assignments are shown in brackets in the following table,
from the file variant.map
. It is organized alphabetically by
abbreviation. Each line consists of an abbreviation and either any
parts of a PostScript FontName
which use that abbreviation or the
PostScript Encoding
name.
0 inferior 1 superior obsolete [2=>7c] Fraktur encoding obsolete [3=>7f] Fraction obsolete [4 fax; now typefacelx
, Lucida Fax] 5 escape for (presently) phonetic encodings 6 escape for Cyrillic encodings [wasSemiSerif
] 7 escape for (mostly) 7-bit encodings 8 escape for (mostly) 8-bit encodings 9 escape for (presently) expert encodings [was oldstyle digits] a Alt Arrows Alternative [was alternate encoding] obsolete [b bright; now typeface lh, Lucida Bright] c SmallCaps d Display Titling Caption Headline TallCaps SwashCaps LombardicCaps Festive e Engraved Copperplate Elite f Fraktur Gothic OldEnglish Handtooled (`gothic' can also be sans) g SmallText designed for small sizes [was grooved, as in the IBM logo] h Shadow i Italic Kursiv Ital text italic j old-style digits [was invisible] k Greek obsolete l Outline OpenFace Blanks m math italic n Informal Fashion Schlbk for Stone o Oblique Obl slanted p Ornaments obsolete [q=>8t Cork (TeX extended) encoding] r roman or sans; often omitted, see text s Gothic sans serif t Monospace fixed-width typewriter u unslanted italic v MathExtension w Script Handwritten Swash Calligraphy Cursive Tango x built with Adobe expert encoding [was expert-encoded] y MathSymbol z Cyrillic font-dependent Cyrillic 5a PhoneticAlternate 5i PhoneticIPA 5s sil-IPA 5t TeX-IPA Fukui Rei, LaTeX T3 5w TeXAfricanLatin wsuipa fonts, LaTeX OT3 5z user 6a T2A 6b Cyrillic part of ISO 8859-5, seven bits 6c T2C 6d Cyrillic CP866 encoding 6i ISO 8859-5 6k Cyrillic KOI8-R encoding 6m Cyrillic Macintosh encoding 6s Storm extra encoding 6t T2B 6w Cyrillic CP1251 encoding 6x X2 6y LCY 6z user 7a A alternate characters only 7c Dfr Fraktur 7d OsF OSF oldstyle digit encoding 7f Fraction 7k OT2Cyrillic 7m TeXMathItalicEncoding see texmital 7t TeX text encoding (as in Computer Modern Roman) 7v TeXMathExtensionEncoding see texmext 7y TeXMathSymbolEncoding see texmsym 7z user 82 GreekKeys 83 Ibycus1 84 Ibycus2 8a StandardEncoding Adobe standard encoding, see 8a 8c TeXTextCompanion LaTeX TS1 8f TeXAfricanLatin LaTeX T4 8i TS0 Intersection of TS1/Adobe Standard 8m Macintosh standard encoding 8n LM1 Textures 8r TeXBase1Encoding see 8r 8t CorkEncoding see cork 8u XT2Encoding cmtt + Latin 2, seexl2.enc
8v TeXVietnamese to be defined 8w Windows 3.1 ANSI encoding 8x Expert expert encoding 8y LY1 TeX 'n ANSI 8z XL2Encoding cmr + Latin 2, seexl2.enc
9c expert + Text companion 9d expert + oldstyle digits + Cork 9e expert + Cork 9i TS0X Intersection of TS1/Standard/Expert 9o expert + oldstyle digits + TeX text 9s SF SuperFont 9t expert + TeX text 9z user - songti for mnm