[comp.fonts] Looking for official OCR-A specifications

wales@valeria.cs.ucla.edu (08/05/88)

(I am cross-posting this to "comp.protocols.iso" because the people who
read that newsgroup seem most likely to know how/where to get copies of
ISO recommendations and standards.  Followups, if any, should go only
to "comp.fonts", as indicated.)

I am looking for the latest official specification for the type style
known as OCR-A.  OCR-A is specially designed for easy readability by
optical character reading equipment.

I want this information because I am trying to port OCR-A to a 24-pin
dot-matrix printer (using its downloadable font capability instead of a
plug-in "font cartridge" ROM for the sake of economy) and wish to make
sure that my ported version will in fact be close enough to the offi-
cial specifications to be reliably readable by OCR equipment.  I have
succeeded already in making a version of OCR-A on my printer which (to
my eye, at least) appears indistinguishable from the output of an old
OCR-A typewriter I have access to; but I realize this may or may not be
good enough in actual use.

(I already have a copy of Tor Lillqvist's METAFONT version of OCR-A,
so there is no need for anyone to send me this or refer me to it.)

Lillqvist mentions the following in the introductory comments to his
METAFONT coding of OCR-A:

		Based on ISO Recommendation R1073, 1st
		ed., May 1969 (probably obsolete by now).

Is ISO Recommendation R1073 still current?  How can I find a copy of it
or its successor document (if any)?

I am particularly interested in finding out whether the OCR-A official
definition has been augmented by the addition of any special characters
not included in Lillqvist's METAFONT version.  For example, I have seen
the ">" character in some OCR-A material -- yet neither Lillqvist's
work nor any of several sources showing samples of OCR-A show a ">".

Please reply by e-mail, since I will be going on vacation in about a
week (meaning that a followup news article might expire before I get
back to see it).

-- Rich Wales // UCLA Computer Science Department // +1 (213) 825-5683
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