[tex-k] Bizarre coding system in lhr10.tfm

Tomas Rokicki rokicki at gmail.com
Sun Oct 20 23:52:35 CEST 2019


There's some information here:

   https://github.com/rokicki/type3search/

Ultimately I was less interested in the encoding *names* than
in the actual PostScript glyph names, and the best source I
found for that was in the psfonts.map files, and, failing that, in
the PFB files.  Almost all current METAFONT fonts have
workalike Type 1 fonts at this point, so I mostly leveraged that
work.

I am not aware of any code that depends on, or uses, any sort
of encoding string in the TFM file in any meaningful way.

There are still a bunch of additional fonts I need to derive
reasonable glyph names for.

I don't seem to have lhr10 in my texlive tree . . .

-tom

On Sun, Oct 20, 2019 at 2:40 PM Karl Berry <karl at freefriends.org> wrote:

> Hi Julian,
>
> (Tom Rokicki: please see end.)
>
>     How come, then, that the cmr10.tfm in the TeXLive distribution does
>     contain the encoding?
>
> I (or maybe it was Thomas Esser, or someone, can't remember now)
> generated the basic cm*.tfm and others long, long, ago. Before TeX Live
> existed, I believe. At that time, I had modes.mf automatically
> including the codingscheme (so-called "Xerox-world info") in generated
> tfms, by redefining MF's end primitive.
>
> This was the case until 2008, when DEK ran afoul of this, and asked me
> (rather insistently :) to let "end" mean "end". So I dutifully changed
> modes.mf so that now "mode_extra_info" has to be called (which no one
> does) to generate the extra info.
>
> However, I did not think it was necessary or desirable to regenerate
> cm*.tfm merely to remove the extra info, nor did Don request this or
> mention it as a problem. Better to let sleeping tfms lie, it seemed to me.
>
> Therefore, tfms generated before 2008 will have the info, and ones
> generated after (e.g., dynamically, as with the lh* fonts) will not, by
> default.
>
>     Presumably that was produced using something
>     like the code in dummy.mf, but I wonder where that is?
>
> Ultimately what generates that stuff is the MF "headerbyte" primitive
> (for the tfm) and "special" primitive (for the gf). I haven't looked
> into what the lh* fonts do. You could presumably figure out what it is
> writing. Maybe it is not writing anything.
>
> In general, you cannot rely on the codingscheme (or related information)
> to be present, or to be useful or correct even if it is. There is,
> sadly, no general way to determine the encoding of a given tfm presented
> in a vacuum.
>
> If you must know the encoding, and not just process the characters as
> they come, then you'll have to somehow look up the filename. I am not
> aware of any global mapping of tfm names to encodings for such lookups,
> either. Fonts available in PostScript/PDF format can be found in
> psfonts.map, etc., which often has encoding info, but lh* is mf-only --
> probably the most significant remaining mf-only font.
>
> That said, Tom Rokicki just worked on this whole mess in some depth in
> order to introduce encodings for Type 3 fonts in dvips. I do not know if
> he discerned encodings for lh*, though. Tom?
>
> Sorry for the long and unsatisfying answer. Good luck. --best, karl.
>


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