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TTF2TFM(1)              FreeBSD General Commands Manual             TTF2TFM(1)

NAME
       ttf2tfm - build TeX metric files from a TrueType font

SYNOPSIS
       ttf2tfm
       ttffile[.ttf|.ttc] [-c caps-height-factor] [-e extension-factor]
       [-E encoding-id] [-f font-index] [-l] [-L ligature-file[.sfd]] [-n]
       [-N] [-O] [-p inencfile[.enc]] [-P platform-id] [-q]
       [-r old-glyphname new-glyphname] [-R replacement-file[.rpl]]
       [-s slant-factor] [-t outencfile[.enc]] [-T inoutencfile[.enc]] [-u]
       [-v vplfile[.vpl]] [-V scvplfile[.vpl]] [-w] [-x]
       [-y vertical-shift-factor] [tfmfile[.tfm]]
       ttf2tfm --version | --help

DESCRIPTION
       This program extracts the metric and kerning information of a TrueType
       font and converts it into metric files usable by TeX (quite similar to
       afm2tfm which is part of the dvips package; please consult its info
       files for more details on the various parameters (especially encoding
       files).

       Since a TrueType font often contains more than 256 glyphs, some means
       are necessary to map a subset of the TrueType glyphs onto a TeX font.
       To do this, two mapping tables are needed: the first (called `input' or
       `raw' encoding) maps the TrueType font to a raw TeX font (this mapping
       table is used by both ttf2tfm and ttf2pk), and the second (called
       `output' or `virtual' encoding) maps the raw TeX font to another
       (virtual) TeX font, providing all kerning and ligature information
       needed by TeX.

       This two stage mapping has the advantage that one raw font can be
       accessed with various LaTeX encodings (e.g. T1 and OT1) via the virtual
       font mechanism, and just one PK file is necessary.

       For CJKV (Chinese/Japanese/Korean/old Vietnamese) fonts, a different
       mechanism is provided (see SUBFONT DEFINITION FILES below).

PARAMETERS
       Most of the command line switch names are the same as in afm2tfm for
       convenience.  One or more space characters between an option and its
       value is mandatory; options can't be concatenated.  For historical
       reasons, the first parameter can not be a switch but must be the font
       name.

       -c caps-height-factor
              The height of small caps made with the -V switch.  Default value
              of this real number is 0.8 times the height of uppercase glyphs.

              Will be ignored in subfont mode.

       -e extension-factor
              The extension factor to stretch the characters horizontally.
              Default value of this real number is 1.0; if less than 1.0, you
              get a condensed font.

       -E encoding-id
              The TrueType encoding ID.  Default value of this non-negative
              integer is 1.

              Will be ignored if -N is used.

       -f font-index
              The font index in a TrueType Collection.  Default is the first
              font (index 0).  [TrueType collections are usually found in some
              CJK fonts; e.g. the first font index specifies glyphs and
              metrics for horizontal writing, and the second font index does
              the same for vertical writing.  TrueType collections usually
              have the extension `.ttc'.]

              Will be ignored for ordinary TrueType fonts.

       -l     Create ligatures in subfonts between first and second bytes of
              all the original character codes.  Example:  Character
              code 0xABCD maps to character position 123 in subfont 45.  Then
              a ligature in subfont 45 between position 0xAB and 0xCD pointing
              to character 123 will be produced.  The fonts of the Korean
              HLaTeX package use this feature.  Note that this option
              generates correct ligatures only for TrueType fonts where the
              input cmap is identical to the output encoding.  In case of
              HLaTeX, TTFs must have platform ID 3 and encoding ID 5.

              Will be ignored if not in subfont mode.

       -L ligature-file
              Same as -l, but character codes for ligatures are specified in
              ligature-file.  For example, `-L KS-HLaTeX' generates correct
              ligatures for the Korean HLaTeX package regardless of the
              platform and encoding ID of the used TrueType font (the file KS-
              HLaTeX.sfd is part of the ttf2pk package).

              Ligature files have the same format and extension as SFD files.
              This option will be ignored if not in subfont mode.

       -n     Use PS names (of glyphs) of the TrueType font.  Only glyphs with
              a valid entry in the selected cmap are used.

              Will be ignored in subfont mode.

       -N     Use only PS names of the TrueType font.  No cmap is used, thus
              the switches -E and -P have no effect, causing a warning
              message.

              Will be ignored in subfont mode.

       -O     Use octal values for all character codes in the VPL file rather
              than names; this is useful for symbol or CJK fonts where
              character names such as `A' are meaningless.

       -p inencfile
              The input encoding file name for the TTF->raw TeX mapping.  This
              parameter has to be specified in a map file (default:
              ttfonts.map) recorded in ttf2pk.cfg for successive ttf2pk calls.

              Will be ignored in subfont mode.

       -P platform-id
              The TrueType platform ID.  Default value of this non-negative
              integer is 3.

              Will be ignored if -N is used.

       -q     Make ttf2tfm quiet.  It suppresses any informational output
              except warning and error messages.  For CJK fonts, the output
              can get quite large if you don't specify this switch.

       -r old-glyphname new-glyphname
              Replaces old-glyphname with new-glyphname.  This switch is
              useful if you want to give an unnamed glyph (i.e., a glyph which
              can be represented with `.gXXX' or `.cXXX' only) a name or if
              you want to rename an already existing glyph name.  You can't
              use the `.gXXX' or `.cXXX' glyph name constructs for
              new-glyphname; multiple occurrences of -r are possible.

              If in subfont mode or if no encoding file is specified, this
              switch is ignored.

       -R replacement-file
              Use this switch if you have many replacement pairs; they can be
              collected in a file which should have `.rpl' as extension.  The
              syntax used in such replacement files is simple: Each non-empty
              line must contain a pair `old-glyphname new-glyphname' separated
              by whitespace (without the quotation marks).  A percent sign
              starts a line comment; you can continue a line on the next line
              with a backslash as the last character.

              If in subfont mode or if no encoding file is specified, this
              switch is ignored.

       -s slant-factor
              The obliqueness factor to slant the font, usually much smaller
              than 1.  Default of this real number is 0.0; if the value is
              larger than zero, the characters slope to the right, otherwise
              to the left.

       -t outencfile
              The output encoding file name for the virtual font(s).  Only
              characters in the raw TeX font are used.

              Will be ignored in subfont mode.

       -T inoutencfile
              This is equivalent to `-p inoutencfile -t inoutencfile'.

              Will be ignored in subfont mode.

       -u     Use only those characters specified in the output encoding, and
              no others.  By default, ttf2tfm tries to include all characters
              in the virtual font, even those not present in the encoding for
              the virtual font (it puts them into otherwise-unused positions,
              rather arbitrarily).

              Will be ignored in subfont mode.

       -v vplfile
              Output a VPL file in addition to the TFM file.  If no output
              encoding file is specified, ttf2tfm uses a default font encoding
              (cmtt10).  Note: Be careful to use different names for the
              virtual font and the raw font!

              Will be ignored in subfont mode.

       -V scvplfile
              Same as -v, but the virtual font generated is a pseudo small
              caps font obtained by scaling uppercase letters by 0.8 (resp.
              the value specified with -c) to typeset lowercase.  This font
              handles accented letters and retains proper kerning.

              Will be ignored in subfont mode.

       -w     Generate PostScript encoding vectors containing glyph indices,
              primarily used to embed TrueType fonts in pdfTeX.  ttf2tfm takes
              the TFM names and replaces the suffix with .enc; that is, for
              files foo01.tfm, foo02.tfm, ... it creates foo01.enc,
              foo02.enc, ... at the same place.

              Will be ignored if not in subfont mode.

       -x     Rotate all glyphs by 90 degrees counter-clockwise.  If no -y
              parameter is given, the rotated glyphs are shifted down
              vertically by 0.25em.

              Will be ignored if not in subfont mode.

       -y vertical-shift-factor
              Shift down rotated glyphs by the given amount (the unit is em).

              Ignored if not in subfont mode or glyphs are not rotated.

       --version
              Shows the current version of ttf2tfm and the used file search
              library (e.g.  kpathsea).

       --help Shows usage information.

       If no TFM file name is given, the name of the TTF file is used,
       including the full path and replacing the extension with `.tfm'.

CMAPS
       Contrary to Type 1 PostScript fonts (but similar to the new CID
       PostScript font format), most TrueType fonts have more than one native
       mapping table, also called `cmap', which maps the (internal) TTF glyph
       indices to the (external) TTF character codes.  Common examples are a
       mapping table to Unicode encoded character positions, and the standard
       Macintosh mapping.

       To specify a TrueType mapping table, use the options -P and -E.  With
       -P you specify the platform ID; defined values are:

       platform        platform ID (pid)
       ----------------------------------
       Apple Unicode   0
       Macintosh       1
       ISO             2
       Microsoft       3

       The encoding ID depends on the platform.  For pid=0, we ignore the -E
       parameter (setting it to zero) since the mapping table is always
       Unicode version 2.0.  For pid=1, the following table lists the defined
       values:

              platform ID = 1

       script          encoding ID (eid)
       ----------------------------------
       Roman           0
       Japanese        1
       Chinese         2
       Korean          3
       Arabic          4
       Hebrew          5
       Greek           6
       Russian         7
       Roman Symbol    8
       Devanagari      9
       Gurmukhi        10
       Gujarati        11
       Oriya           12
       Bengali         13
       Tamil           14
       Telugu          15
       Kannada         16
       Malayalam       17
       Sinhalese       18
       Burmese         19
       Khmer           20
       Thai            21
       Laotian         22
       Georgian        23
       Armenian        24
       Maldivian       25
       Tibetan         26
       Mongolian       27
       Geez            28
       Slavic          29
       Vietnamese      30
       Sindhi          31
       Uninterpreted   32

       Here are the ISO encoding IDs:

              platform ID = 2

       encoding     encoding ID (eid)
       ASCII        0
       ISO 10646    1
       ISO 8859-1   2

       And finally, the Microsoft encoding IDs:

              platform ID = 3

       encoding              encoding ID (eid)
       Symbol                0
       Unicode 2.0           1
       Shift JIS             2
       GB 2312 (1980)        3
       Big 5                 4
       KS X 1001 (Wansung)   5
       KS X 1001 (Johab)     6
       UCS-4                 10

       The program will abort if you specify an invalid platform/encoding ID
       pair.  It will then show the possible pid/eid pairs.  Please note that
       most fonts have at most two or three cmaps, usually corresponding to
       the pid/eid pairs (1,0), (3,0), or (3,1) in case of Latin based fonts.
       Valid Microsoft fonts should have a (3,1) mapping table, but some fonts
       exist (mostly Asian fonts) which have a (3,1) cmap not encoded in
       Unicode.  The reason for this strange behavior is the fact that some
       old MS Windows versions will reject fonts having a non-(3,1) cmap
       (since all non-Unicode Microsoft encoding IDs are for Asian MS Windows
       versions).

       The -P and -E options of ttf2tfm must be equally specified for ttf2pk;
       the corresponding parameters in a map file are `Pid' and `Eid',
       respectively.

       The default pid/eid pair is (3,1).

       Similarly, an -f option must be specified as `Fontindex' parameter in a
       map file.

       If you use the -N switch, all cmaps are ignored, using only the
       PostScript names in the TrueType font.  The corresponding option in a
       map file is `PS=Only'.  If you use the -n switch, the default glyph
       names built into ttf2tfm are replaced with the PS glyph names found in
       the font.  In many cases this is not what you want because the glyph
       names in the font are often incorrect or non-standard.  The
       corresponding option in a map file is `PS=Yes'.

       Single replacement glyph names specified with -r must be given directly
       as `old-glyphname new-glyphname' in a map file; -R is equivalent to the
       `Replacement' option.

INPUT AND OUTPUT ENCODINGS
       You must specify the encoding vectors from the TrueType font to the raw
       TeX font and from the raw TeX font to the virtual TeX font exactly as
       with afm2tfm, but you have more possibilities to address the character
       codes.  [With `encoding vector' a mapping table with 256 entries in
       form of a PostScript vector is meant; see the file T1-WGL4.enc of this
       package for an example.]  With afm2tfm, you must access each glyph with
       its Adobe glyph name, e.g. `/quotedsingle' or `/Acircumflex'.  This has
       been extended with ttf2tfm; now you can (and sometimes must) access the
       code points and/or glyphs directly, using the following syntax for
       specifying the character position in decimal, octal, or hexadecimal
       notation: `/.c_decimal-number_', `/.c0_octal-number_', or
       `/.c0x_hexadecimal-number_'.  Examples: `/.c72', `/.c0646', `/.c0x48'.
       To access a glyph index directly, use the character `g' instead of `c'
       in the just introduced notation.  Example: `/.g0x32'.  [Note: The
       `.cXXX' notation makes no sense if -N is used.]

       For pid/eid pairs (1,0) and (3,1), both ttf2tfm and ttf2pk recognize
       built-in default Adobe glyph names; the former follows the names given
       in Appendix E of the book `Inside Macintosh', volume 6, the latter uses
       the names given in the TrueType Specification (WGL4, a Unicode subset).
       Note that Adobe names for a given glyph are often not unique and do
       sometimes differ, e.g., many PS fonts have the glyph `mu', whereas this
       glyph is called `mu1' in the WGL4 character set to distinguish it from
       the real Greek letter mu.  Be also aware that OpenType (i.e.
       TrueType 2.0) fonts use an updated WGL4 table; we use the data from the
       latest published TrueType specification (1.66).  You can find those
       mapping tables in the source code file ttfenc.c.

       On the other hand, the switches -n and -N makes ttf2tfm read in and use
       the PostScript names in the TrueType font itself (stored in the `post'
       table) instead of the default Adobe glyph names.

       Use the -r switch to remap single glyph names and -R to specify a file
       containing replacement glyph name pairs.

       If you don't select an input encoding, the first 256 glyphs of the
       TrueType font with a valid entry in the selected cmap will be mapped to
       the TeX raw font (without the -q option, ttf2tfm prints this mapping
       table to standard output), followed by all glyphs not yet addressed in
       the selected cmap.  However, some code points for the (1,0) pid/eid
       pair are omitted since they do not represent glyphs useful for TeX:
       0x00 (null), 0x08 (backspace), 0x09 (horizontal tabulation), 0x0d
       (carriage return), and 0x1d (group separator).  The `invalid character'
       with glyph index 0 will be omitted too.

       If you select the -N switch, the first 256 glyphs of the TrueType font
       with a valid PostScript name will be used in case no input encoding is
       specified.  Again, some glyphs are omitted:  `.notdef', `.null', and
       `nonmarkingreturn'.

       If you don't select an  output encoding, ttf2tfm uses the same mapping
       table as afm2tfm would use (you can find it in the source code file
       texenc.c); it corresponds to TeX typewriter text.  Unused positions
       (either caused by empty code points in the mapping table or missing
       glyphs in the TrueType font) will be filled (rather arbitrarily) with
       characters present in the input encoding but not specified in the
       output encoding (without the -q option ttf2tfm prints the final output
       encoding to standard output).  Use the -u option if you want only
       glyphs in the virtual font which are defined in the output encoding
       file, and nothing more.

       One feature missing in afm2tfm has been added which is needed by
       LaTeX's T1 encoding: ttf2tfm will construct the glyph `Germandbls' (by
       simply concatenating two `S' glyphs) even for normal fonts if possible.
       It appears in the glyph list as the last item, marked with an asterisk.
       Since this isn't a real glyph it will be available only in the virtual
       font.

       For both input and output encoding, an empty code position is
       represented by the glyph name `/.notdef'.

       In encoding files, you can use `\' as the final character of a line to
       indicate that the input is continued on the next line.  The backslash
       and the following newline character will be removed.

SUBFONT DEFINITION FILES
       CJKV (Chinese/Japanese/Korean/old Vietnamese) fonts usually contain
       several thousand glyphs; to use them with TeX it is necessary to split
       such large fonts into subfonts.  Subfont definition files (usually
       having the extension `.sfd') are a simple means to do this smoothly.

       A subfont file name usually consists of a prefix, a subfont infix, and
       a postfix (which is empty in most cases), e.g.

         ntukai23 -> prefix: ntukai, infix: 23, postfix: (empty)

       Here the syntax of a line in an SFD file, describing one subfont:

       _whitespace_ _infix_ _whitespace_ _ranges_ _whitespace_

       _infix_ :=
              anything except whitespace.  It is best to use only
              alphanumerical characters.

       _whitespace_ :=
              space, formfeed, carriage return, horizontal and vertical tabs
              -- no newline characters.

       _ranges_ :=
              _ranges_ _whitespace_ _codepoint_ |
              _ranges_ _whitespace_ _range_ |
              _ranges_ _whitespace_ _offset_ _whitespace_ _range_

       _codepoint_ :=
              _number_

       _range_ :=
              _number_ `_' _number_

       _offset_ :=
              _number_ `:'

       _number_ :=
              hexadecimal (prefix `0x'), decimal, or octal (prefix `0')

       A line can be continued on the next line with a backslash ending the
       line.  The ranges must not overlap; offsets have to be in the range
       0-255.

       Example:

         The line

           03   10: 0x2349 0x2345_0x2347

         assigns to the code positions 10, 11, 12, and 13 of the subfont
         having the infix `03' the character codes 0x2349, 0x2345, 0x2346, and
         0x2347 respectively.

       The SFD files in the distribution are customized for the CJK package
       for LaTeX.

       You have to embed the SFD file name into the TFM font name (at the
       place where the infix will appear) surrounded by two `@' signs, on the
       command line resp. a map file; both ttf2tfm and ttf2pk switch then to
       subfont mode.

       It is possible to use more than a single SFD file by separating them
       with commata and no whitespace; for a given subfont, the first file is
       scanned for an entry, then the next file, and so on.  Later entries
       override entries found earlier (possibly only partially).  For example,
       the first SFD file sets up range 0x10-0xA0, and the next one modifies
       entries 0x12 and 0x25.  As can be easily seen, this algorithm allows
       for adding and replacing, but not for removing entries.

       Subfont mode disables the options -n, -N, -p, -r, -R, -t, -T, -u, -v,
       -V and -w for ttf2tfm; similarly, no `Encoding' or `Replacement'
       parameter is allowed in a map file.  Single replacement glyph names are
       ignored too.

       ttf2tfm will create all subfont TFM files specified in the SFD files
       (provided the subfont contains glyphs) in one run.

       Example:

         The call

           ttf2tfm ntukai.ttf ntukai@Big5,Big5-supp@

         will use Big5.sfd and Big5-supp.sfd, producing all subfont files
         ntukai01.tfm, ntukai02.tfm, etc.

RETURN VALUE
       ttf2tfm returns 0 on success and 1 on error; warning and error messages
       are written to standard error.

SOME NOTES ON FILE SEARCHING
       Both ttf2pk and ttf2tfm use either the kpathsea, emtexdir, or MiKTeX
       library for searching files (emtexdir will work only on operating
       systems which have an MS-DOSish background, i.e.  MS-DOS, OS/2,
       Windows; MikTeX is specific to MS Windows).

       As a last resort, both programs can be compiled without a search
       library; the searched files must be then in the current directory or
       specified with a path.  Default extensions will be appended also (with
       the exception that only `.ttf' is appended and not `.ttc').

   kpathsea
       The actual version of kpathsea is displayed on screen if you call
       either ttf2pk or ttf2tfm with the --version command line switch.

       Here is a table of the file type and the corresponding kpathsea
       variables.  TTF2PKINPUTS and TTF2TFMINPUTS are program specific
       environment variables introduced in kpathsea version 3.2:

              .ttf and .ttc   TTFONTS
              ttf2pk.cfg      TTF2PKINPUTS
              .map            TTF2PKINPUTS
              .enc            TTF2PKINPUTS, TTF2TFMINPUTS
              .rpl            TTF2PKINPUTS, TTF2TFMINPUTS
              .tfm            TFMFONTS
              .sfd            TTF2PKINPUTS, TTF2TFMINPUTS

       Please consult the info files of kpathsea for details on these
       variables.

       You should set the TEXMFCNF variable to the directory where your
       texmf.cnf configuration file resides.

       Here is the proper command to find out to which value a kpathsea
       variable is set (we use TTFONTS as an example).  This is especially
       useful if a variable isn't set in texmf.cnf or in the environment, thus
       pointing to the default value which is hard-coded into the kpathsea
       library.

              kpsewhich -progname=ttf2tfm -expand-var='$TTFONTS'

       We select the program name also since it is possible to specify
       variables which are searched only for a certain program -- in our
       example it would be TTFONTS.ttf2tfm.

       A similar but not identical method is to say

         kpsewhich -progname=ttf2tfm -show-path='truetype fonts'

       [A full list of format types can be obtained by saying `kpsewhich
       --help' on the command line prompt.]  This is exactly how ttf2tfm (and
       ttf2pk) searches for files; the disadvantage is that all variables are
       expanded which can cause very long strings.

   emtexdir
       Here the list of suffixes and their related environment variables to be
       set in autoexec.bat (resp. in config.sys for OS/2):

              .ttf and .ttc   TTFONTS
              ttf2pk.cfg      TTFCFG
              .map            TTFCFG
              .enc            TTFCFG
              .rpl            TTFCFG
              .tfm            TEXTFM
              .sfd            TTFCFG

       If one of the variables isn't set, a warning message is emitted.  The
       current directory will always  be searched.  As usual, one exclamation
       mark appended to a directory path causes subdirectories one level deep
       to be searched, two exclamation marks cause all subdirectories to be
       searched.  Example:

         TTFONTS=c:\fonts\truetype!!;d:\myfonts\truetype!

       Constructions like `c:\fonts!!\truetype' aren't possible.

   MiKTeX
       Both ttf2tfm and ttf2pk have been fully integrated into MiKTeX.  Please
       refer to the documentation of MiKTeX for more details on file
       searching.

PROBLEMS
       Many vptovf implementations allow only 100 bytes for the TFM header
       (the limit is 1024 in the TFM file format itself): 8 bytes for checksum
       and design size, 40 bytes for the family name, 20 bytes for the
       encoding, and 4 bytes for a face byte.  There remain only 28 bytes for
       some additional information which is used by ttf2tfm for an
       identification string (which is essentially a copy of the command
       line), and this limit is always exceeded.

       The optimal solution is to increase the value of max_header_bytes in
       the file vptovf.web (and probably pltotf.web too) to, say, 400 and
       recompile vptovf (and pltotf).  Otherwise you'll get some (harmless)
       error messages like

         This HEADER index is too big for my present table size

       which can be safely ignored.

SEE ALSO
       ttf2pk(1), afm2tfm(1), vptovf(1),
       the info pages for dvips and kpathsea

AVAILABILITY
       ttf2tfm is part of the FreeType 1 package, a high quality TrueType
       rendering library.

AUTHORS
       Werner LEMBERG <wl@gnu.org>
       Frederic LOYER <loyer@ensta.fr>

FreeType2 version                 27-Jun-2013                       TTF2TFM(1)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | PARAMETERS | CMAPS | INPUT AND OUTPUT ENCODINGS | SUBFONT DEFINITION FILES | RETURN VALUE | SOME NOTES ON FILE SEARCHING | PROBLEMS | SEE ALSO | AVAILABILITY | AUTHORS

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