On Aug 6, 2007, at 4:03 PM, Michael Droettboom wrote: > There is now experimental support for custom fonts in math mode. > Try the above, and let me know how it goes...
I finally had time to try out your new code a bit, and I like it. It works well for the very simple cases, like superscripts. One thing that I noticed is that the height of the superscript depends on the font size -- is this a hardwired distance, or relative to font size. Also, it seems that when using the regular unicode fonts, more difficult math expressions, e.g., integrals, look terrible. I guess this is the point when CM is unavoidable... I have been thinking that it might be possible to use some of the CM sans fonts, like CM bright. Also, there is a Arev font set (vera, backwards -- basically Bitstream Vera with math extensions) that looks like it might be promising, but it seems that mathtext does not see these extented characters. I found an excellent writeup on math/text font combinations in LaTeX here: http://ctan.tug.org/tex-archive/info/Free_Math_Font_Survey/survey.html from this informative page: http://cg.scs.carleton.ca/~luc/greek.html There are, of course, many others. -Rob ---- Rob Hetland, Associate Professor Dept. of Oceanography, Texas A&M University http://pong.tamu.edu/~rob phone: 979-458-0096, fax: 979-845-6331 ------------------------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by: Splunk Inc. Still grepping through log files to find problems? Stop. Now Search log events and configuration files using AJAX and a browser. Download your FREE copy of Splunk now >> http://get.splunk.com/ _______________________________________________ Matplotlib-devel mailing list Matplotlib-devel@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-devel