gftodvi (1) - Linux Manuals
gftodvi: make proof sheets from generic font files
NAME
gftodvi - make proof sheets from generic font files
SYNOPSIS
gftodvi [-overflow-label-offset=,real/] [-verbose] gf_file_nameDESCRIPTION
This manual page is not meant to be exhaustive. The complete documentation for this version of TeX can be found in the info file or manual Web2C: A TeX implementation.The gftodvi program converts a generic font (gf) file output by, for example, mf(1), to a device independent (DVI) file (that can then be typeset using the same software that has already been written for TeX). The characters in the gf file will appear one per page, with labels, titles, and annotations as specified in Appendix H (Hardcopy Proofs) of The Metafontbook.
gftodvi uses other fonts in addition to the main gf file. A `gray' font is used to typeset the pixels that actually make up the character. (We wouldn't want all the pixels to be simply black, since then labels, key points, and other information would be lost.) A `title' font is used for the information at the top of the page. A `label' font is used for the labels on key points of the figure. A `slant' font is used to typeset diagonal lines, which otherwise have to be simulated using horizontal and vertical rules. The default gray, title, and label fonts are gray, cmr8, and cmtt10, respectively; there is no default slant font.
To change the default fonts, you can give
special
commands in your
Metafont source file, or you can change the fonts online. An online dialog
ensues if you end the
gf_file_name
with a `/'. For example,
The
gf_file_name
on the command line must be complete. Because
the resolution is part of the extension, it would not make
sense to append a default extension as is done with TeX or
DVI-reading software. The output file name uses the same
root as the
gf
file, with the
.dvi
extension added. For example, the input file
cmr10.2602gf
would become
cmr10.dvi.
Without the
-verbose
option,
gftodvi
operates silently. With it, a banner and progress report are printed on
stdout.
See
tex(1)
for the details of the searching.
will use
/home/art/don/black
as the `gray' font and
/home/fonts/slantimagen6
as the `slant' font (this name indicates
a font for lines with slope 1/6 at the resolution of an Imagen printer).
OPTIONS
The argument to
-overflow-label-offset
specifies the distance from the right edge of the character
bounding box at which the overflow equations (if any) are typeset.
The value is given in TeX points. The default is a little over two
inches.
ENVIRONMENT
gftodvi
looks for
gf_file_name
using the
environment variable GFFONTS. If that is not set, it uses the variable
TEXFONTS. If that is not set, it uses the system default.
FILES
AUTHORS
Donald E. Knuth wrote and still maintains the program. It was
published as part of the
Metafontware
technical report. Paul Richards originally ported it to Unix.
Bug reports should go to tex-k [at] tug.org (https://lists.tug.org/tex-k).
SEE ALSO
tex(1),
mf(1).
Donald E. Knuth,
The Metafontbook
(Volume C of
Computers and Typesetting),
Addison-Wesley, 1986, ISBN 0-201-13445-4.
Donald E. Knuth et al.,
Metafontware.