On Thu, Mar 17, 2011 at 04:05, Stefan Müller
I'm using Windows Vista 64bit and installed the rsfs font by right-clicking the .pfm files. I thought I had to use the .pfb files, but Windows did not recognize those and didn't show "Install" in the context menu. After installing the .pfm files I could find them in "C:\Windows\Fonts".
.pfb is "Printer Font, Binary". .pfa is "Printer Font, ASCII". .pfm is Printer Font Metrics, binary. .afm is Adobe Font Metrics, ASCII. Typically each font will have a set of outlines in a pfb or pfa file, and a set of metrics in a pfm or afm file. For Windows, you want the pfb and pfm files.
Is this a typo and do you mean .pfm file? Otherwise I don't get it. Should I just copy the .pfb files to "C:\Windows\Fonts", too? Did something went wrong with installation?
On Windows 7, the OS will identify only the .pfm file as the actual font. However, when you install the font by opening it and clicking the "Install" button, Windows invisibly locates the matching .pfb file from the same directory, and copies them both to the C:\Windows\Fonts directory. It then hides the separate files from you. However, you can open the command line prompt and cd to \windows\fonts and use dir to see them.
fonts | names | identifying system font files with suffix otf fonts | names | adding path from OSFONTDIR: c:/windows/fonts fonts | names | adding path from fontconfig file: c:/windows/fonts
in the output, so I guess OSFONTDIR is correct (where would I change it, anyway?) as "c:/windows/fonts" is considered.
Yes, looks like it's correct. You'd change it by setting an environment variable. http://www.itechtalk.com/thread3595.html
Here mtxrun tries to identify fonts with a number of "suffixes". It only consideres otf, ttf, ttc, dfont and afm (and caps versions). Shouldn't there be pfm or pfb as well?
On Linux, it seems to scan for .afm files, as that's what Linux expects and installs in preference to pfm. I'd expect the Windows version to scan for .pfm, but I've never run any kind of TeX under Windows. To be honest, I did have problems getting LuaTeX and XeTeX to recognize the PostScript fonts installed with GhostScript, so I eventually removed them from my font path. My general conclusion is that life is a lot, lot simpler if you throw away all your Type 1 fonts and replace them with OpenType versions. (I used fontforge to convert the few that I really wanted to keep.) Also, if you can find out what TeX is looking for, there are tools to convert between pfb and pfa, and between afm and pfm. mathew -- URL:http://www.pobox.com/~meta/