Thank you Wolfgang!! I've used LaTeX off and on since the 1980's but never did anything with Plain TeX so that's why I did not recognize the \s! . Bill Meahan K8QN "I want to live other lives. I've never quite believed that one chance is all I get. Writing is my way of making other chances." -- Anne Tyler On 05/15/2012 14:16, Wolfgang Schuster wrote:
Am 15.05.2012 um 19:28 schrieb Bill Meahan:
The \s!… string are a method to save memory in TeX but you don’t have to use it, just use “serif” instead of “\s!serif”.
With \typescriptone etc. you can access the value in the arguments for \starttypescripts, e.g. in the following example
\starttypescript [serif] [venturis]
\typescriptone expands to “serif” and \typescripttwo expands to “venturis”.
I also don't seem to be able to find a command reference for \starttypescript which explains what the various option fields mean or what "predefined" values exist for each. The first argument of \starttypescript can be
- serif - sans - mono - handwriting - calligraphy
and the first argument of \definefontsynonym can be
– Serif - SerifItalic - SerifBold - SerifSlanted - SerifBoldItalic - SerifBoldSlanted - SerifCaps - Sans - SansItalic – … - Mono - MonoItalic - … - Handwriting - Calligraphy
Wolfgang ___________________________________________________________________________________ If your question is of interest to others as well, please add an entry to the Wiki!
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