Re: [abcusers] Fonts.
Jack Campin [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: I think it would be better to adopt one font for the symbols (music encoded in ABC doesn't need a great number of them) and let users assign other fonts to specific roles in the score themselves (title font, composer font, text annotation font...). A user who is trying to embed scores generated by your software into other documents, or match an existing house style for publication, will need the ability to control these. Definitely. If you must make a choice or set a default... My favourite variable-width serif text font is Palatino. I arrived at that choice by experiment: my vision is not particularly good, has been deteriorating for years, and this was during a bad patch. I printed a pageful of the same text at the same size in every font I could find, seeing which one was readable from the greatest distance. Palatino won by a big margin, with Computer Modern far at the bottom by an even bigger one. I rather like Palatino too. The problem with Computer Modern is that to look good it requires printing at a really high resolution (Knuth's books are typeset on a phototypesetter that does something like 4333dpi, and the 600dpi that current laser printers can manage are definitely not enough), so while it is in many ways a very good design the output devices that the likes of us are likely to have around won't really be able to do it proper justice. There is a free Palatino lookalike available with Ghostscript. I haven't done the same experiment as thoroughly with other kinds of font, but get the impression Gill Sans would beat any other sans-serif proportional font at the same test. I generally use Courier for fixed- width but I'm sure there must be something better out there. Gill Sans is another one that I like. If you go with Palatino a good sans-serif font to use with it is Optima, also by Hermann Zapf (but I don't think a free version is available anywhere). You can get a CD-ROM from Bitstream that has something like 500 fonts at a very reasonable price; the fonts are not great but they are certainly more workable than the usual »1000 FREE FONTS« offerings that you get from jumble sales, and that includes fairly nice versions of Palatino, Gill Sans and Optima. For fixed width, Courier is about as bad a font as there can conceivably be. Knuth's Computer Modern Typewriter is not at all bad (and it even comes in a sane encoding, compared to the rest of CM). Recent distributions of X11 contain a mostly-free set of fonts by BH called »Lucidux« which includes a rather nice monospaced variety. Anselm -- Anselm Lingnau .. [EMAIL PROTECTED] Host: What a parasite lives in or on. Your programs have this relationship to the computer. -- Larry Wall Randal Schwartz, *Programming Perl* To subscribe/unsubscribe, point your browser to: http://www.tullochgorm.com/lists.html
Re: [abcusers] Fonts.
Anyone have the skinny on available fonts and licensing issues involved in distributing those fonts? If there's a plethora, do you have a favorite, and why is it your favorite I guess more importantly, since I assume most of the fonts are a 'lookup assignment table' type system, if possible, we'd like to use a font that a) gives a good clean overall screen and print appearance especially when a user resizes layout, b) contains tons of symbols to satisfy any musical whim, c) is available and somewhat similar in font-metrics across platforms { mac, pc, X } TeX is cross-platform, sort of, and has all the symbols you want You can also get its fonts in TrueType and PostScript versions, and I *think* you can get most of what you want for free, at least if you're prepared to do some conversion work Have a rummage round a TeX archive site Your problems are (a) TeX has an idiosyncratic scheme for accessing fonts which no other application can make use of, and (b) the standard TeX text font, Computer Modern, is an etiolated abortion that nobody in their right mind would want to use if they weren't stuck with TeX and which appears to be the result of a conspiracy by headache-pill manufacturers I think it would be better to adopt one font for the symbols (music encoded in ABC doesn't need a great number of them) and let users assign other fonts to specific roles in the score themselves (title font, composer font, text annotation font) A user who is trying to embed scores generated by your software into other documents, or match an existing house style for publication, will need the ability to control these If you must make a choice or set a default My favourite variable-width serif text font is Palatino I arrived at that choice by experiment: my vision is not particularly good, has been deteriorating for years, and this was during a bad patch I printed a pageful of the same text at the same size in every font I could find, seeing which one was readable from the greatest distance Palatino won by a big margin, with Computer Modern far at the bottom by an even bigger one Bodoni, Garamond and Caslon would probably rate pretty well too, I couldn't test them at the time I haven't done the same experiment as thoroughly with other kinds of font, but get the impression Gill Sans would beat any other sans-serif proportional font at the same test I generally use Courier for fixed- width but I'm sure there must be something better out there === http://wwwpurrdemoncouk/jack/ === To subscribe/unsubscribe, point your browser to: http://wwwtullochgormcom/listshtml