Kracked_P_P wrote:

[snip]

> First - - -
> Everyone has their own opinion of which font is the most "wonderful" one
> that they have used.
> 
> Second - - -
> There are a few "ideas" on what a "book" font is, but for me a book font
> is one that is really easy to read for extended periods, like in a
> hardcover novel or paperback.
> 
> Third - - -
> Times-Roman - Times is the generic font name.  Many fonts started from
> the "generic Times" look.  Roman is actually a type of style for the
> most part.  Some equate Roman as the same as "normal" or "un-styled".
> Times-Roman is a "classic" font that is used by many computer systems as
> the original default font.  There are other "Times" fonts, including
> "Times", "Times New Roman" "Times Europa", "Old Times", just to name a
> few that I have seen or have in my font collection.
> 
> If you really want to see how many "Times" fonts there are, or which
> fonts came from Times, then go to the Wiki page and you may be
> surprised.  I do not remember which version of Times is part of the MS
> core fonts that is installed with Windows, or installed in Linux with
> the "ttf-mscorefonts-installer" package.
> 
> Forth - - -
> To be honest, many fonts have one file for each style.  One for Bold,
> for Italic, Bold Italic, etc., etc..
> 
> For LinLibertine:
> 
> _R - regular
> _RI - italic
> _RB - bold
> _RZ - semi-bold
> _RZI - semi-bold italic
> _aBL - bold slanted
> 
> Each of the files are a different style for the font.
> For "LinLibertine", I have 16 different styles
> LinLibertine and LinLibertine G are two different fonts.
> I have only 6 for "G" so far.
> 
> This is just the nature of the font file world.  If you have a font with
> different styles, either you have that style file installed OR you must
> have a software package that takes a font and generates the style you
> need internally.  There are some "complex" fonts that have more than one
> style in a single file, but sometimes they are not the easiest to find
> and sometimes not easy for a package to use properly.
> 


Great response. I can't add much except a bit of history about the Times font. 
It was originally commissioned by the Times of London newspaper, which wanted a 
typeface having "strength of line and economy of space." It runs a little small 
for its nominal size and is somewhat condensed left to right, meaning its 
letters are narrower than those found in other fonts. To see the difference, 
type a line in 12 point Times and then the same line directly below it in 
something like 12 point Palatino, or Century, or Bookman. The second line will 
look enormous compared to the Times. The United States Supreme Court requires 
court briefs to be written in an 11 point Roman font. It warns lawyers that if 
they submit a brief in 11 point Times, the brief will be rejected because "11 
point Times" is actually smaller than 11 points.

The flavor of Times that comes with MS Windows is "Times New Roman."

You will rarely see books printed in Times, the reason being it is intended for 
short bursts of reading, as in a newspaper article. Books tend to use fonts 
that are fuller and not condensed. Popular choices are Palatino, Century 
Schoolbook, Garamond, Minion, and Goudy Old Style.

Lastly, in addition to the font files (TTF) in Doug's list of files, the files 
having a "Tex" extension are probably some form of TeX/LaTeX document. I don't 
believe they would be fonts.

Virgil
                                          
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