[tex-k] How Does One Create pk Files From A PostScript Font?
Paul Vojta
vojta at math.berkeley.edu
Fri Jun 8 02:36:06 CEST 2012
On Fri, Jun 08, 2012 at 02:27:09AM +0200, Reinhard Kotucha wrote:
> On 2012-06-07 at 09:10:05 -0600, Jay F Shachter wrote:
>
> > I have some PostScript definitions of fonts that I would like to use
> > in TeX. I created the necessary tfm file by running afm2tfm on an afm
> > file that I had earlier created from the font definitions by using
> > $GS_HOME/lib/printafm.ps (part of the GhostScript distribution; I
> > observe, parenthetically, that the printafm procedure choked until I
> > modified the font definition by adding an otherwise unnecessary
> > FontName entry to the font dictionary).
> >
> > At this point, I can, presumably (I have not tried it), create dvi
> > files using TeX. The remaining unsolved problem is creating pk files
> > so that my TeX output can be rendered. The (misnamed) ps2pk program
> > requires a .pfb or .psa file. I have neither, only a .ps file
> > containing a dictionary definition indexed by the keys /FontName,
> > /FontType, /FontMatrix, /FontBBox, /PaintType, /FontInfo (which is
> > itself a dictionary), /Encoding, /Metrics, /CharStrings, and
> > /BuildChar.
> >
> > Of course, I understand that the name of a file means nothing. I can
> > certainly copy or rename the .ps file to a .pfa file. The more
> > substantive problem is that ps2pk seems to insist on a Type 1 font.
> > Thus:
> >
> > $ cp OldJaffa.ps OldJaffa.pfa
> > $ ps2pk OldJaffa
> > psfile = ./OldJaffa.pfa
> > afmfile = ./OldJaffa.afm
> > basename of OldJaffa = OldJaffa
> > basename of ./OldJaffa.pfa = OldJaffa.pfa
> > Type1OpenScalable error (result: -2) on ./OldJaffa.pfa
> >
> > My PostScript files define Type 3 fonts, not Type 1 fonts. How do I
> > use them with TeX? Thank you in advance for any and all replies. You
> > may reach me using any of the means indicated below.
>
> Trying to create .pk fonts is a step into the wrong direction, IMO.
> It makes more sense to create a Type 1 font instead. In order to find
> out the best approach, I need more details about your font. Are there
> outlines already or are glyphs described with arbitrary PostScript code?
>
> Regards,
> Reinhard
Or: Have you tried gsftopk?
--Paul Vojta, vojta at math.berkeley.edu
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