[OS X TeX] adobe minion and garamond
Kyle Johnson
kbj at linguist.umass.edu
Wed Jul 28 22:17:54 CEST 2004
Many thanks to Herb Schulz (and to Walter Schmidt for the incredible
resources he's made available). And even more thanks to Alan Curtis --
your very thorough post saved us hours of work. We've almost gotten it
together now so that the otf minion fancy swashes and the like works.
We're trying to to set up a T1 encoding, in particular to use the
Icelandic thorn and eth fonts. When we use otftotfm on the opentype
fonts with 8x encoding, however, it doesn't read them. (We need to use
8x, right?) Has anyone here had success using otftotfm with 8x
encoding?
TIA,
Kyle and Justin
On Jul 27, 2004, at 2:40 PM, Alan Curtis wrote:
> On Jul 23, 2004, at 4:00 PM, Kyle Johnson wrote:
>
>> I'm having trouble setting up some fonts for LaTeX, and I'd desperate
>> for help.
>>
>> I am trying to get OpenType versions of
>> Adobe Minion Pro (Regular and Italic) to work with LaTeX. I have
>> downloaded the LCDF tools to try to create TFM files (and then
>> hopefully
>> AFM files somehow) but I don't know how to use OTFtoTFM. Can anyone
>> explain to me how to do this or suggest an alternative?
>>
>>
>
> I thought I give back some of the things I have learned from this list
> by sharing this HowTo that I put together for my own use a while ago.
>
> Alan
>
>
> \_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\
> _\_
>
> How to Install Minion OTF Font for LaTeX under OS X.
>
> Build from notes from [OS X TeX], particularly from posts from Jason
> Curole and Bruno Voisin.
>
> This assumes that the lcdf-typetools are installed via i-Installer.
>
> 1. Start with the .otf fonts.
>
> MinionPro-Bold.otf
> MinionPro-BoldIt.otf
> MinionPro-It.otf
> MinionPro-Regular.otf
> MinionPro-Semibold.otf
> MinionPro-SemiboldIt.otf
> MinionStd-Black.otf
>
> 2. Run
>
> : otfinfo -f MinionPro-Regular.otf
>
> to find out what features each font has
>
> 3. Decide what TeX fonts you want and what to call them. This is based
> on the LaTeX font mechanism. We don't need to use virtual fonts; we
> will
> create a .pfb file for each encoding/feature set we would like to use.
> As an example, let's create a set of fonts in the standard OT1
> encoding.
> I used the file ot1pmn.fd (available from CTAN) as a guide. (pmn is the
> standard TeX name for Adobe Minion: choose something else as a root
> name
> if it is likely to cause confusion.)
>
> A basic set might be,
>
> Encoding: Family: Series: Shape: Name:
> OT1 pmn m n pmnr7t
> OT1 pmn m sc pmnrc7t
> OT1 pmn m it pmnri7t
> OT1 pmn b n pmnb7t
> OT1 pmn b sc pmnbc7t
> OT1 pmn b it pmnbi7t
> OT1 pmn sb n pmns7t
> OT1 pmn sb sc pmnsc7t
> OT1 pmn sb it pmnsi7t
> OT1 pmn eb n pmnc7t
>
> 4. Run otftotfm to make the fonts and maps
>
> We first need an encoding file for OT1.
>
> : cp /usr/local/share/lcdf-typetools/7t.enc .
>
> We also need a place to store the .map output of otftotfm
>
> : touch pmn.map
>
> We'll also choose to use the ligatures and kerning features.
>
> otftotfm -n pmnr7t -f kern -f liga -e 7t.enc MinionPro-Regular.otf
> >>pmn.map
> otftotfm -n pmnrc7t -f kern -f liga -e 7t.enc -f smcp
> MinionPro-Regular.otf >>pmn.map
> otftotfm -n pmnri7t -f kern -f liga -e 7t.enc MinionPro-It.otf
> >>pmn.map
> otftotfm -n pmnb7t -f kern -f liga -e 7t.enc MinionPro-Bold.otf
> >>pmn.map
> otftotfm -n pmnbc7t -f kern -f liga -e 7t.enc -f smcp
> MinionPro-Bold.otf >>pmn.map
> otftotfm -n pmnbi7t -f kern -f liga -e 7t.enc MinionPro-BoldIt.otf
> >>pmn.map
> otftotfm -n pmns7t -f kern -f liga -e 7t.enc MinionPro-Semibold.otf
> >>pmn.map
> otftotfm -n pmnsc7t -f kern -f liga -e 7t.enc -f smcp
> MinionPro-Semibold.otf >>pmn.map
> otftotfm -n pmnsi7t -f kern -f liga -e 7t.enc MinionPro-SemiboldIt.otf
> >>pmn.map
> otftotfm -n pmnc7t -f kern -f liga -e 7t.enc MinionStd-Black.otf
> >>pmn.map
>
> 5. Open the pmn.map file in an editor and delete all lines that begin
> "I had to ...". Save it.
>
> 6. Copy the map file to a convenient location. I use
>
> : cp pmn.map ~/Library/texmf/fonts/map/
>
> and use updmap to update TeX's font maps.
>
> For this I use my own .cfg file which has the extra line Map pmn.map
>
> and the command
>
> : sudo updmap --cnffile ~/Library/texmf/fonts/map/updmap.cfg
>
> These are the contents of ~/Library/texmf/fonts/map/updmap.cfg
>
> ----------------------
> # updmap.cfg
> # master file is /usr/local/teTeX/share/texmf.tetex/web2c/updmap.cfg
> # see that file for options
> dvipsPreferOutline true
> LW35 ADOBE
> dvipsDownloadBase35 false
> pdftexDownloadBase14 false
> dvipdfmDownloadBase14 false
>
> # ps-type1 versions for cm+ams; CTAN:fonts/cm/ps-type1/bluesky
> MixedMap bsr.map
> MixedMap bsr-interpolated.map
>
> # Adobe Minion Map
> pmn.map
> ----------------------------------
>
> Be careful to include any other font maps you regularly use in this
> file.
>
>
> 7. You can now test the fonts using
>
> : pdftex
> testfont
> pmnr7t
> \table
> \end
>
> etc.
>
> 8. To use the fonts in LaTeX using the standard scheme you need a .fd
> file. Fortunately, there is one to hand, the ot1pmn.fd from CTAN.
>
> To use this file, we need to edit the names in pmn.map and decide what
> to do about the font shapes we didn't make. The latter are easy to deal
> with, just comment out the appropriate lines. If you want to you can
> edit the .map file to make versions of them on the fly.
>
> The other edit in .map is to remove the '--base' from the font names to
> make them compatible with the .fd file. Or you can also edit the names
> in the .fd by adding --base. Remember to updmap if necessary.
>
>
> 9. Test the font.
>
> Make a LaTeX document along these lines.
>
> ------
> \documentclass{article}
> \begin{document}
> \thispagestyle{empty}
>
> \fontfamily{pmn}
> \fontencoding{OT1}
> \fontseries {m}
> \fontshape {n}
> \selectfont
>
> The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog, flying off finally to
> the fjord.
> \end{document}
> ------
>
> and test that it works.
>
> 10. Finally, put all the files in the right places. You need to find
> homes for *.pfb, *.tfm, *.fd, *.enc
>
>
> : mkdir -p ~/Library/texmf/fonts/type1/abobe/minion
> : cp *.pfb ~/Library/texmf/fonts/type1/abobe/minion
> : mkdir -p ~/Library/texmf/fonts/tfm/abobe/minion
> : cp *.tfm ~/Library/texmf/tex/latex/abobe/minion
> : mkdir -p ~/Library/texmf/tex/latex/adobe/minion
> : cp *.fd ~/Library/texmf/tex/latex/adobe/minion
> : cp *.enc ~/Library/texmf/fonts/map
>
> You can ignore the .vf files.
>
> 11. If you wish, make a .sty file like
> ---------------
> \ProvidesPackage{minion}
> \renewcommand{\rmdefault}{pmn}
> \endinput
> ---------------
>
> 12. For more details about installing fonts see the excellent tutorial
> by Bruno Voisin.
>
> http://homepage.mac.com/bkerstetter/tex/fonttutorial-current.html
>
> and the thread on
> [OS X TeX] Open type fonts with LaTeX (dvips+ghostscript)
> with posts by Jason Curole.
>
>
>
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