[comp.fonts] Producing Ghostscript

ghost@aladdin.com (L. Peter Deutsch) (11/14/90)

A recent posting inquired about utilities for converting another font
format to the .gsf format used by Ghostscript.

The Ghostscript .gsf fonts are simply Adobe Type 1 fonts, with a couple of
conventions that don't affect rendering (e.g., no eexec encryption,
although Ghostscript does handle eexec properly).  Users have successfully
used Adobe-originated Type 1 fonts with Ghostscript.  Ghostscript also, of
course, accepts Type 3 fonts, where the rendering of each character is
defined entirely by a P*stScr*pt program; in fact, the version of the
Hershey fonts distributed with Ghostscript works this way.

We recognize that the fonts distributed with Ghostscript version 2.0 are
not of particularly high quality; inaccuracies in the Ghostscript renderer
make them look even less pleasing.  Karl Berry and Kathy Hargreaves are
working hard on creating better fonts for Ghostscript in the future.

Future versions of Ghostscript will also accept other Adobe font
types, such as type 0 (composite) fonts.  I understand that type 4
and 5 fonts exist, and I would like to support them, but I don't know
where to find the documentation: could someone help me out?

L. Peter Deutsch :: Aladdin Enterprises :: P.O. box 60264, Palo Alto, CA 94306
ghost@aladdin.com ; {uunet,sun,decwrl}!parcplace!aladdin!ghost ; (415)329-0264
	    "Implementation is the sincerest form of flattery."

amanda@visix.com (Amanda Walker) (11/15/90)

In article <26.UUL1.3#5127@aladdin.com> ghost@aladdin.com
(L. Peter Deutsch) writes:
>Users have successfully used Adobe-originated Type 1 fonts with Ghostscript.

Not all of them work, however.  I haven't found the incompatibility yet,
but it's in there somewhere...

-- 
Amanda Walker						      amanda@visix.com
Visix Software Inc.					...!uunet!visix!amanda
--
"No confidence is so vast as that which is grounded in ignorance."
		--Judith Tarr