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DKUUG/EUUG Conference tapes

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Index: T f

⟦84f344632⟧ TextFile

    Length: 6548 (0x1994)
    Types: TextFile
    Names: »fontbl.tex«

Derivation

└─⟦52210d11f⟧ Bits:30007239 EUUGD2: TeX 3 1992-12
    └─⟦c319c2751⟧ »unix3.0/TeX3.0.tar.Z« 
        └─⟦036c765ac⟧ 
            └─⟦this⟧ »TeX3.0/TeXcontrib/uw/fontbl.tex« 
└─⟦060c9c824⟧ Bits:30007080 DKUUG TeX 2/12/89
    └─⟦this⟧ »./tex82/TeXcontrib/uw/fontbl.tex« 

TextFile


% The essential parts of this macro appeared in {\it TUGboat, Volume 3, No. 1}
% in the note: "DISPLAY OF A FONT IN TABLE FORM." by Roger L. Beeman.
% This version was rewritten by Pierre A. MacKay to take advantage of
% the new features of \TeX82.  It is now interactive, and prompts the
% user for a font name.  If the font is a text font, a sample paragraph
% is set, which is justified to three times the lower-case alphabet length
% if that will fit in the overall \hsize.  (If the font is a fixed-width
% font such as "amtt", the sample is set with a ragged right margin.) 
% The sample is leaded 20% over the stated point-size, so that a
% 10-point font is set 10 on 12.  The length of both upper and lower
% case alphabets is given, along with the height and depth of the
% lower case alphabet and the height of the upper case alphabet.  These
% last dimensions can be very useful for calculating the size of
% close-fitting boxes and struts.
%
% Non-text fonts are displayed in table form only.
%
% If you have \TeX\ running with "plain.tex" loaded, 
% you can start this macro by typing "tex fontbl" and you will be prompted
% for the rest
%
\baselineskip 0pt \lineskip 0pt
\vsize 8.5truein
\let\sl=\tensl
\newcount\bighand\newcount\littlehand
\bighand=\time\divide\bighand by 60
\littlehand=\bighand\multiply\littlehand by -60
\advance\littlehand by\time
\def\makedateline{\line{{\sl \fontname scaled \\magstep\step\hfil
  \the\bighand:\ifnum\littlehand<10{0}\fi
  \the\littlehand\ - \the\month/\the\day/\the\year}}}

\output{\shipout\vbox{\hrule width1em\vskip 1ex
\makedateline\vskip1em\box255\vskip1em
\hrule width1em}\global\advance\count0 by 1}

\newdimen\maxwide
\dimendef\vu=\maxwide
\setbox 9\hbox{\sl 0}

\def\spike{\hbox to 0pt{\vbox to 1\ht9{}}}
\def\cell#1{\hbox to \vu{\hfill\char'#1\hfill}\vrule}
\def\label#1{\vbox to 1\ht8{\vfill
  \hbox to 35pt{\hfill\sl '#10\hskip1em}\vfill}\vrule}

\def\seprow{\def\m{\hskip \vu{}\vrule height 2pt}\hbox{\m\m\m\m\m\m\m\m}}
\def\cellrow#1{\setbox 8\vbox{\seprow\hbox{\spike\ignorespaces
               \cell{#10}\cell{#11}\cell{#12}\cell{#13}\ignorespaces
               \cell{#14}\cell{#15}\cell{#16}\cell{#17}\ignorespaces
               \hfill}\seprow\hrule}\hbox{\label{#1}\box8}}

\def\lcol#1{\hbox to \vu{\hfill{\sl #1}\hfill}\hskip .4pt}
\def\chw#1{\hbox{\char'#1}}

\def\colw#1{\vbox{\chw{#10}
                  \chw{#11}
                  \chw{#12}
                  \chw{#13}
                  \chw{#14}
                  \chw{#15}
                  \chw{#16}                                              
                  \chw{#17}}}

\def\setw#1{\vbox{\colw{#10}             
                  \colw{#11}
                  \colw{#12}
                  \colw{#13}
                  \colw{#14}
                  \colw{#15}
                  \colw{#16}
                  \colw{#17}}}
\def\getw{\setbox 0\vbox{\setw0\setw1\hbox to 1\wd9{}
          \hbox to 1em{}}\vu=1.625\wd0}
 
\def\table#1{\font\tablefont=#1 scaled \scale
\tablefont\getw\null\vfil
\hbox to 6in{\hfil\ignorespaces
\vbox{\ifdim\fontdimen2\tablefont>0pt \hbox{\hskip35pt \fontname \hfil} \fi 
      \vskip10pt
      \hbox{\hskip35pt\lcol0\lcol1\lcol2\lcol3\lcol4\lcol5\lcol6\lcol7}
      \vskip 4 pt
      \hbox{\hskip35pt\vbox{\hrule width 8\vu}\vbox{\hrule width 3.6pt}}
      \cellrow{00}\cellrow{01}\cellrow{02}\cellrow{03}
      \cellrow{04}\cellrow{05}\cellrow{06}\cellrow{07}
      \cellrow{10}\cellrow{11}\cellrow{12}\cellrow{13}
      \cellrow{14}\cellrow{15}\cellrow{16}\cellrow{17}}\ignorespaces
\hss}}
\def\tblraggedright{\rightskip0pt plus5em}

\global\def\test{}
\global\def\fin{END }
\global\def\lcfin{end }
\global\def\halfstep{half }
\def\\{$\backslash$}
\def\doit{
\baselineskip 0pt \lineskip 0pt 
\message{Type a valid font name, or type END to quit :}
\read16 to\fontname
\ifx\fontname\lcfin\let\test=\fin\else\global\let\test=\fontname\fi
\ifx \fin\test \relax 
\else \message{Scaled to what magstep? (half, or 0..5):}
\read16 to\step
\ifx \halfstep\step \global\def\scale{1095 } \else 
  \global\def\scale{\ifcase\step 1000\or 
    1200\or 1440\or 1728\or 2074\or 2488\fi\relax}
  \fi
\message{Graphing font \fontname}
       \table{\fontname}
\rightskip 0pt % So that one ragged right font doesn't affect all
%    following fonts
\vskip 1em
\ifdim\fontdimen2\tablefont>0pt
  \setbox8=\hbox{abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz}
  \setbox7=\hbox{ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ}
  \global\dimen8=1\wd8\global\dimen7=.5\hsize
  \global\dimen5=1\ht8\global\dimen4=1\dp8\global\dimen3=1\ht7
  \edef\length{\the\dimen8}
  \global\dimen6=\dimen8\global\multiply\dimen6 by 3
  \ifdim\dimen6>\hsize \global\dimen6=\hsize \fi
  \ifdim\fontdimen3\tablefont=0pt \tblraggedright
     \global\advance\dimen6 by -40pt \fi  
  \vskip 1em
  \noindent
  \ifdim\dimen8<\dimen6 
    \line{\unhbox8\hfil }
    \vskip 1ex \fi
  \centerline{{\rm Alphabet length \length. Quad is \the\fontdimen6\tablefont}}
  \vskip .25em
  \centerline{{\rm Lower case height is \the\dimen5 ; depth is \the\dimen4}}
    \vskip 1em
    \global\dimen8=1\wd7 \edef\length{\the\dimen8}
    \noindent
  \ifdim\dimen8<\dimen6 
    \line{\unhbox7 \hfil}
    \vskip 1ex  \fi
    \centerline{{\rm Alphabet length \length ; height \the\dimen3}}
  \vskip 1em \vfil
  \vbox{\hsize \dimen6
  \baselineskip 1.2em
  \parskip .15em
  \lineskip .2em

The design of low-resolution typefaces is complicated by the need 
to achieve two different and rather incompatible ends.  A font which is
exclusively intended for Office Automation equipment should be designed 
to make the very best use of that environment.  Its proportions, balance,
shading and letter-spacing can and indeed must be fitted to exact
pixel-bound\-aries, whe\-ther or not the refinements of anti-aliasing are
used.  

A low-resolution font which was created primarily as the proof-copy
imitation of an associated high-resolu\-tion font will never be quite 
so precisely matched to its environment.  Its contours will necessarily be
determined by exact pixel-boundaries, but often not in the way we might
prefer.  It need not be sloppy, but it can never be so well tuned as 
a font of the first variety.  It is a poor Platonic reflection of an
idea that cannot be fully known except in the dazzling light
of high-resolution typesetting.  The vast majority of fonts produced
with METAFONT belong to this second variety.  A low-resolution
METAFONT character should be judged for what it is, and not for what
it has never claimed to be.
}
\fi

\vfill\penalty-10000

\doit
\fi
}

\doit
\bye