hpftodit
create font description files for use with groff -Tlj4
see also :
groff - grolj4
Synopsis
hpftodit
[ -adqsv ] [ -in ]
tfm_file map_file font
It is possible
to have whitespace between the -i option and
its parameter.
add an example, a script, a trick and tips
examples
source
hp2xx ................. hp2xx
hpftodit .............. groff
hterm .................. xopt
i18nOlwmV2 ............. xopt
description
hpftodit
creates a font file for use with a Hewlett-Packard
LaserJet 4–series (or newer) printer with
groff -Tlj4, using data from an HP tagged font
metric (TFM) file. tfm_file is the name of the TFM
file for the font; Intellifont and TrueType TFM files are
supported, but symbol set TFM files are not. map_file
is a file giving the groff names for characters in the font;
this file should consist of a sequence of lines of the
form:
m u c1
c2 ... [ # comment ]
where m
is a decimal integer giving the MSL number of the character,
u is a hexadecimal integer giving the Unicode value
of the character, and c1, c2, ... are the
groff names of the character. The values can be separated by
any whitespace; the Unicode value must use uppercase digits
A–F, and must be without a leading ’0x’,
’u’, or ’U+’. Unicode values
corresponding to composite glyphs are decomposed; e.g.,
’u00C0’ becomes ’u0041_0300’. The
name for a glyph without a groff name may be given as
uXXXX if the glyph corresponds to a Unicode value, or
as an unnamed glyph ’---’. If the given Unicode
value is in the Private Use Area (0xE000–0xF8FF), the
glyph is included as an unnamed glyph. Refer to
groff_diff(1) for additional information about
unnamed glyphs and how to access them.
Blank lines and
lines beginning with ’#’ are ignored. A
’#’ following one or more groff names begins a
comment. Because ’#’ is a valid groff name, it
must appear first in a list of groff names if a comment is
included, e.g.,
3 0023 # #
number sign
or
3 0023 # sh #
number sign
rather than
3 0023 sh # #
number sign
which will
treat the first ’#’ as the beginning of the
comment.
font is
the name of the groff font file. The groff font file is
written to font; if font is specified as
’-’, the output is written to the standard
output.
The
-s option should be given if the font is
special (a font is special if troff should
search it whenever a character is not found in the current
font). If the font is special, it should be listed in the
fonts command in the DESC file; if it is not special,
there is no need to list it, since troff can
automatically mount it when it’s first used.
If the
-i option is used, hpftodit
automatically will generate an italic correction, a left
italic correction and a subscript correction for each
character (the significance of these parameters is explained
in groff_font(5)).
options
-a
Include characters in the TFM
file that are not included in the map file. A glyph with
corresponding Unicode value is given the name uXXXX;
a glyph without a Unicode value is included as an unnamed
glyph ’---’. A glyph with a
Unicode value in the Private Use Area (0xE000–0xF8FF)
also is included as an unnamed glyph.
This option
provides a simple means of adding Unicode-named and unnamed
glyphs to a font without including them in the map file, but
it affords little control over which glyphs are placed in a
regular font and which are placed in a special font. The
presence or absence of the -s option has some
effect on which glyphs are included: without the
-s option, only the “text” symbol
sets are searched for matching glyphs; with the
-s option, only the “mathematical”
symbol sets are searched. Nonetheless, restricting the
symbol sets searched isn’t very selective—many
glyphs are placed in both regular and special fonts.
Normally, the -a option should be used only as
a last resort.
-d
Dump information about the TFM
file to the standard output; this option can be useful for
ensuring that a TFM file is a proper match for a font, and
that the contents of the TFM file are suitable. The
information includes the values of important TFM tags, and a
listing (by MSL number for Intellifont TFM files or by
Unicode value for TrueType TFM files) of the glyphs included
in the TFM file. The unit of measure ’DU’ for
some tags indicates design units; there are 8782 design
units per em for Intellifont fonts, and 2048 design units
per em for TrueType fonts. Note that the accessibility of a
glyph depends on its inclusion in a symbol set; some TFM
files list many glyphs but only a few symbol sets.
The glyph
listing includes the glyph index within the TFM file, the
MSL or Unicode value, and the symbol set and character code
that will be used to print the glyph. If map_file is
given, groff names are given for matching glyphs. If only
the glyph index and MSL or Unicode value are given, the
glyph does not appear in any supported symbol set and cannot
be printed.
With the
-d option, map_file is optional, and
font is ignored if given.
-q
Suppress warnings about
characters in the map file that were not found in the TFM
file. Warnings never are given for unnamed glyphs or by
glyphs named by their Unicode values. This option is useful
when sending the output of hpftodit to the standard
output.
-v
Print the hpftodit version number.
-s
The font is special. This option adds the special
command to the font file, and affects the order in which HP
symbol sets are searched for each glyph. Without the
-s option, the “text” sets are
searched before the “mathematical” symbol sets.
With the -s option, the search order is
reversed.
-in
Generate an italic correction for each character so that
the character’s width plus the character’s
italic correction is equal to n thousandths of an em
plus the amount by which the right edge of the
character’s bounding is to the right of the
character’s origin. If this would result in a negative
italic correction, use a zero italic correction instead.
Also generate a
subscript correction equal to the product of the tangent of
the slant of the font and four fifths of the x-height of the
font. If this would result in a subscript correction greater
than the italic correction, use a subscript correction equal
to the italic correction instead.
Also generate a
left italic correction for each character equal to n
thousandths of an em plus the amount by which the left edge
of the character’s bounding box is to the left of the
character’s origin. The left italic correction may be
negative.
This option
normally is needed only with italic or oblique fonts; a
value of 50 (0.05 em) usually is a reasonable choice.
files
/usr/share/groff/1.22.1/font/devlj4/DESC
Device description file.
/usr/share/groff/1.22.1/font/devlj4/F
Font description file for font F.
/usr/share/groff/1.22.1/font/devlj4/generate/*.map
Symbol mapping files
see also
groff ,
groff_diff, grolj4 ,
groff_font, lj4_font