xenial (1) otftotfm.1.gz

Provided by: lcdf-typetools_2.105~dfsg-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       otftotfm - create TeX font metrics from OpenType fonts

SYNOPSIS

       otftotfm [-a] [options] fontfile [texname]

DESCRIPTION

       Otftotfm  creates  the  font  metric  and  encoding files required to use an OpenType font with TeX.  You
       supply an OpenType ".otf" or ".ttf" font file, a base ".enc" encoding, and a TeX name "texname"  for  the
       resulting  font,  and  say  which  OpenType  features  should  be turned on.  Then otftotfm generates and
       installs the corresponding TeX-related metric files (".tfm" TeX font metrics, ".vf"  virtual  fonts,  and
       ".enc"  encoding  files).   It  works  on  both PostScript-flavored and TrueType-flavored OpenType fonts,
       although TrueType-flavor support will only work easily with pdftex.

       The easiest way to use otftotfm is with the -a option; see Automatic Mode below.   Without  -a,  otftotfm
       writes all its output files to the current directory.

       After  running  "otftotfm fontfile texname" and installing the results (manually or with -a), you can use
       the OpenType font in plain TeX with a command like this:

           \font\myfont=texname at 10pt
           {\myfont This text uses the OpenType font.}

       LaTeX   users   will   generally    make    a    ".fd"    input    file    so    that    commands    like
       "\renewcommand{\rmdefault}{TeXName}"  work  correctly.   See  the  EXAMPLE  section  for  more; check the
       DIAGNOSTICS and FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS sections if you have trouble.

   OpenType Features
       OpenType fonts support optional features that change their appearance.  Use the  -f  option  to  turn  on
       selected  features.   For  example,  "-fsmcp"  replaces  lower-case  letters with the corresponding small
       capitals, in fonts that support this.

       You'll generally provide at least the "-fkern" and "-fliga" options, which activate  pair  kerns  and  f-
       ligatures.   Other  interesting  features  include  "-fcpsp", for capital spacing; "-fdlig", for optional
       ligatures; "-flnum", "-fonum", "-fpnum", and "-ftnum", to  control  digit  glyphs;  "-fsmcp",  for  small
       capitals;  "-fswsh",  for  swash variants; and "-fcswh", for contextual swash.  See the FEATURE DIRECTORY
       section below for more.  The otfinfo(1) program will report which features a font supports; run  "otfinfo
       -f fontfile".

       Feature options can also apply a feature to a subset of characters in the font.  For example, "--lf smcp"
       only replaces letters with small  capitals,  whereas  "-fsmcp"  might  additionally  replace  digits  and
       punctuation marks with small-capital versions.

   Automatic Mode
       Automatic  mode,  triggered  by the -a/--automatic option, installs font metrics and encoding files where
       TeX can find them, and additionally installs a Type 1 font and mapping for dvips(1).  This requires a TeX
       installation  that  follows  the TeX Directory Structure standard (http://www.tug.org/tds/), such as most
       Unix TeX installations.

       Automatic mode should run seamlessly out of the box.  Otftotfm will install metrics files, encodings, map
       files, and Type 1 fonts into $HOME/.texmf-var or any other writable TEXMF directory, and run updmap(1) to
       update the global lists of installed fonts.  (On older teTeX installations, you may first  need  to  copy
       the  system's  updmap.cfg file to $HOME/texmf/web2c and run mktexlsr(1).  On newer TeXLive installations,
       you may need to set the TEXMFVAR environment variable.)  You can then run "otftotfm -a fontfile  texname"
       and  immediately  refer to the font in TeX using the texname you supplied.  Again, you will have to write
       ".fd" files and/or typescripts to make the font conveniently accessible from LaTeX or ConTeXt.   See  the
       DIAGNOSTICS section if you have problems with these instructions.

       In  automatic  mode,  otftotfm  searches  your  $TEXMFVAR  or  $TEXMF path for a writable directory, then
       installs files under that directory tree as follows:

       File type   Directory                          Filename
       TFM         TEXMF/fonts/tfm/vendor/typeface/   texname[--base].tfm
       VF          TEXMF/fonts/vf/vendor/typeface/    texname.vf
       PL          TEXMF/fonts/pl/vendor/typeface/    texname[--base].pl
       VPL         TEXMF/fonts/vpl/vendor/typeface/   texname.vpl
       encoding    TEXMF/fonts/enc/dvips/vendor/      a_signature.enc
                   or TEXMF/dvips/vendor/
       font map    TEXMF/fonts/map/dvips/vendor/      vendor.map
                   or TEXMF/dvips/vendor/

       "TEXMF" stands for the writable TEXMF directory.  Texname is the font name supplied as otftotfm's  second
       argument.   The  vendor  and  typeface  strings  are required by TDS; they default to "lcdftools" and the
       font's family name, respectively, but see the --vendor and --typeface options.  Signature  is  an  opaque
       6-character encoding signature.

       Otftotfm  also  installs  a  font  file  suitable  for  printing.  PostScript-flavored OpenType fonts are
       translated to Type 1 format and installed as PFB fonts.  TrueType-flavored fonts are  normally  installed
       as  is,  since  pdftex  and  pdflatex can read TrueType directly; but if you provide the --type42 option,
       otftotfm will translate TrueType fonts to Type 42 format, which dvips  understands.   Otftotfm  does  not
       overwrite existing font files.

       The installation paths are as follows, where PSname is the font's PostScript name.

       PFB        TEXMF/fonts/type1/vendor/typeface/      PSname.pfb
       TrueType   TEXMF/fonts/truetype/vendor/typeface/   fontfile
       Type 42    TEXMF/fonts/type42/vendor/typeface/     PSname.t42

       You  can  override  these  directories  with  environment variables and options as follows.  Options take
       precedence over environment variables.

       File type   Environment variable   Option
       TFM         TFMDESTDIR             --tfm-directory
       VF          VFDESTDIR              --vf-directory
       PL          PLDESTDIR              --pl-directory
       VPL         VPLDESTDIR             --vpl-directory
       encoding    ENCODINGDESTDIR        --encoding-directory
       PFB         T1DESTDIR              --type1-directory
       TrueType    TRUETYPEDESTDIR        --truetype-directory
       Type 42     T42DESTDIR             --type42-directory
       font map    -                      --map-file

       Otftotfm will update the TEXMF/ls-R file when installing  files  under  TEXMF.   It  will  also  run  the
       updmap(1)  program after changing a map file, unless the --no-updmap option was supplied.  However, if an
       executable file called TEXMF/dvips/updmap exists, this file is executed (from the TEXMF/dvips  directory)
       rather than the global updmap.  This is so you can write a fast, customized version of updmap if desired.

EXAMPLE

       This  section  uses  MinionPro  to  show  one way to install OpenType fonts for LaTeX.  We begin with six
       fonts: "MinionPro-Regular.otf", "MinionPro-It.otf", "MinionPro-Semibold.otf", "MinionPro-SemiboldIt.otf",
       "MinionPro-Bold.otf", and "MinionPro-BoldIt.otf".

       Our  first task is to decide how to encode the fonts.  The "encoding scheme" is used by TeX to decide how
       to typeset accents and symbols like "$".  The "LY1" encoding scheme has reasonable accent support and  is
       a  good  choice for many OpenType fonts.  LY1 corresponds to the "texnansx.enc" encoding file, so we will
       supply otftotfm with the "-e texnansx" option.

              Expert note: Strictly speaking, LY1 corresponds to the "texnansi.enc" encoding  file.   Since  the
              "texnansx.enc"  version  omits duplicate characters, it has more room for font-specific glyphs and
              is generally a better choice; but if you plan to type characters  like  "ae"  directly  into  your
              editor, rather than using TeX commands like \ae, you should use "texnansi.enc".

       Next,  we  decide  on  a naming scheme for the font metric files.  Let's use the OpenType font names as a
       base.  (There's generally no need to follow the six-character "Karl Berry" naming scheme.)  Just in  case
       we come back later and add a different encoding scheme, we'll prepend "LY1--" to each name.

       We're  now  ready  to  run  otftotfm for the first set of fonts.  Note the "-fkern -fliga" options, which
       access pair kerns and the default "f" ligatures.

           otftotfm -a -e texnansx MinionPro-Regular.otf \
                   -fkern -fliga LY1--MinionPro-Regular
           otftotfm -a -e texnansx MinionPro-It.otf \
                   -fkern -fliga LY1--MinionPro-It
           otftotfm -a -e texnansx MinionPro-Semibold.otf \
                   -fkern -fliga LY1--MinionPro-Semibold
           otftotfm -a -e texnansx MinionPro-SemiboldIt.otf \
                   -fkern -fliga LY1--MinionPro-SemiboldIt
           otftotfm -a -e texnansx MinionPro-Bold.otf \
                   -fkern -fliga LY1--MinionPro-Bold
           otftotfm -a -e texnansx MinionPro-BoldIt.otf \
                   -fkern -fliga LY1--MinionPro-BoldIt

       The small-caps fonts are generated with an additional "-fsmcp" option.  We append "--fsmcp" to  the  font
       metric  names  as  well,  differentiating them from the regular fonts.  Although MinionPro's italic fonts
       support small-caps, the LaTeX font selection scheme can't access them easily, so we've left them off.

           otftotfm -a -e texnansx MinionPro-Regular.otf \
                   -fkern -fliga -fsmcp LY1--MinionPro-Regular--fsmcp
           otftotfm -a -e texnansx MinionPro-Semibold.otf \
                   -fkern -fliga -fsmcp LY1--MinionPro-Semibold--fsmcp
           otftotfm -a -e texnansx MinionPro-Bold.otf \
                   -fkern -fliga -fsmcp LY1--MinionPro-Bold--fsmcp

       To get old-style numerals, just add the "-fonum" option to each invocation -- and, to  reduce  confusion,
       append "--fonum" to the font metric names.

       At  this  point, all our font metric files are installed, and it's finally time to create the ".fd" file.
       (The ".fd" format is documented in The LaTeX Companion.)  Let's call the LaTeX font  family  "MinionPro".
       Then the ".fd" file is "LY1MinionPro.fd", and it contains:

           \DeclareFontFamily{LY1}{MinionPro}{}
           \DeclareFontShape{LY1}{MinionPro}{m}{n}%
                   { <-> LY1--MinionPro-Regular }{}
           \DeclareFontShape{LY1}{MinionPro}{m}{it}{ <-> LY1--MinionPro-It }{}
           \DeclareFontShape{LY1}{MinionPro}{m}{sc}%
                   { <-> LY1--MinionPro-Regular--fsmcp }{}
           \DeclareFontShape{LY1}{MinionPro}{sb}{n}%
                   { <-> LY1--MinionPro-Semibold }{}
           \DeclareFontShape{LY1}{MinionPro}{sb}{it}%
                   { <-> LY1--MinionPro-SemiboldIt }{}
           \DeclareFontShape{LY1}{MinionPro}{sb}{sc}%
                   { <-> LY1--MinionPro-Semibold--fsmcp }{}
           \DeclareFontShape{LY1}{MinionPro}{b}{n}{ <-> LY1--MinionPro-Bold }{}
           \DeclareFontShape{LY1}{MinionPro}{b}{it}%
                   { <-> LY1--MinionPro-BoldIt }{}
           \DeclareFontShape{LY1}{MinionPro}{b}{sc}%
                   { <-> LY1--MinionPro-Bold--fsmcp }{}
           \DeclareFontShape{LY1}{MinionPro}{bx}{n}%
                   { <-> ssub * MinionPro/b/n }{}
           \DeclareFontShape{LY1}{MinionPro}{bx}{it}%
                   { <-> ssub * MinionPro/b/it }{}
           \DeclareFontShape{LY1}{MinionPro}{bx}{sc}%
                   { <-> ssub * MinionPro/b/sc }{}

       We're now ready to use MinionPro in LaTeX, with lines like this in the document preamble:

           \usepackage[LY1]{fontenc}
           \renewcommand{\rmdefault}{MinionPro}
           \renewcommand{\bfdefault}{b}

       Of course, we're free at any time to add more MinionPro variants with otftotfm; they'll become accessible
       to LaTeX as soon as we edit the "MinionPro.fd" file.

OPTIONS

       With long options, you need type only as many characters as will make the option unique.

   Font Feature and Transformation Options
       -s script[.lang], --script=script[.lang]
            Apply features suitable to the script system script and language system lang.  Scripts and  language
            systems  are  two-to-four-letter  names  assigned  by  Microsoft and Adobe.  Examples include "latn"
            (Latin script), "grek" (Greek script), and "yi.YIC" (Yi script with classic characters).  If lang is
            not  specified,  otftotfm  will  use the default language system for that script.  You can give this
            option multiple times.  Run "otfinfo -s font" to see the  list  of  scripts  and  languages  a  font
            supports.  Defaults to "latn".

       -f feature, --feature=feature
            Activate the feature named feature.  Features are four-letter names assigned by Microsoft and Adobe;
            they are meant to correspond to font behaviors, such as kerning or small-capitals.  Examples include
            "liga"   (default  ligatures),  "dlig"  (discretionary  ligatures),  "kern"  (kerning),  and  "c2sc"
            (replacing capitals with small capitals).   Give  this  option  multiple  times  to  apply  multiple
            features.  Run "otfinfo -f [--script option] font" to see the list of features a font supports for a
            specified script.  Defaults to any features required by the selected scripts.

       --lf feature, --letter-feature=feature
            Activate the feature named feature, but only for letters.  For instance, the "-f smcp"  option  will
            apply  the  small-caps  feature  to  all  characters  in the encoding; this may result in changes to
            punctuation and numbers as well as letters.  The  "--lf  smcp"  option  will  apply  the  small-caps
            feature only to letters, meaning characters with the "Letter" Unicode property.

       --subs-filter pattern
       --include-subs pattern
       --exclude-subs pattern
       --clear-subs
            Limit  the  characters that otftotfm will substitute.  Substitution is allowed on an input character
            if it matches at least one of the --include patterns, and none  of  the  --exclude  patterns.   Each
            pattern  applies  to  all  following features, except that the --clear option clears any accumulated
            patterns.  The --subs-filter pattern  option  acts  like  --clear-subs  followed  by  --include-subs
            pattern.  For pattern syntax, see GLYPH PATTERNS, below.

            In  the  command line below, the '<Number>' pattern will force the "onum" feature to substitute only
            numbers (and not, for example, punctuation).  The "salt" feature can still substitute any character.
                otftotfm -fsalt --include-subs="<Number>" -fonum ...

       -E fac, --extend=fac
            Widen, or extend, the font by a factor of fac.  Like afm2tfm(1)'s -e option.

       -S amt, --slant=amt
            Oblique, or slant, the font by amt.  Like afm2tfm(1)'s -s option.

       -L amt, --letterspacing=amt
            Letterspace each character by amt units, where  1000  units  equals  one  em.   The  width  of  each
            character increases by amt, with half the space distributed to each sidebearing.  Boundary-character
            kerns are added to maintain alignment at the ends of lines.

       --math-spacing[=skewchar]
            Ignore the font's claimed character widths, deriving horizontal metrics from bounding boxes instead.
            This results in similar spacing as the Computer Modern Math Italic font, with increased sidebearings
            for letters like f and j.

            If you provide skewchar, a number between 0 and 255  or  a  single  character,  then  otftotfm  adds
            heuristically-derived  kerns to the font that may improve accent positions in math mode.  To get the
            benefits, you must tell TeX about the skewchar with a command like "\skewchar\font=skewchar".

       -k N, --min-kern=N
            Only output kerning pairs whose absolute value is N or larger.  Larger minimum  kerns  make  kerning
            less precise, but shrink the output TFM file.  The default minimum kern is 2.0, or 0.002 em.

       --space-factor=fac
            Scale the width of the inter-word space by a factor of fac.

       --design-size=size
            Set  the  output  font's  design  size  to  size,  a value in TeX points.  This value is mostly just
            documentation, since LaTeX essentially ignores fonts' design sizes, but plain TeX  may  occasionally
            use  the design size to decide how large a font should be.  (Loading a font in TeX "at" a particular
            size effectively ignores the design size; loading a font plain or "scaled" by a  given  factor  uses
            the  design  size.)   The default is taken from the input font's optical size feature, or 10pt if it
            has no such feature.

       --fixed-width
            Set the font to fixed-width (its space character will have no  stretch  or  shrink).   Normally  you
            won't  need  this  option;  the  font will tell otftotfm whether it is fixed width.  The opposite of
            --fixed-width is --proportional-width.

       --italic-angle=angle
            Set the output font's default italic angle to angle, a number of degrees.  This value is used by TeX
            to  position  accents.   Normally you won't need this option; the font will tell otftotfm its italic
            angle.

       --x-height=val
            Set the output font's x-height to val.  This value is used by TeX to position accents. Normally  you
            won't  need this option.  Val may be a number expressed in font units; ‘x’, which uses the height of
            the font's lowercase x; or ‘font’, which uses the font's declared x-height metric.

   Encoding Options
       -e encoding, --encoding=encoding
            Select the output metrics's base dvips(1) encoding.  Otftotfm will  search  for  encoding[.enc]  the
            same  way that dvips would, so you may not need to give a full pathname.  Say -e - to start with the
            font's default encoding.  See ENCODINGS, below, for more information.

       --boundary-char=char
            Set the font's boundary character to char, which should either be a single non-digit character, or a
            number between -1 and 255. The default is taken from the encoding.

       --altselector-char=char
            Set  the  font's  alternate  selector  character  to char, which should either be a single non-digit
            character, or a number between -1 and 255.  Alternate selectors let TeX  authors  explicitly  choose
            between  versions  of  a character.  For instance, the '--altselector-char="*"' option turns the "*"
            character into a special switch that cycles between alternates.  For instance,  the  TeX  input  "A"
            would  produce  the  normal  version  of  the  "A"  Unicode  character, "A*" would produce the first
            alternate, "A**" would produce the second alternate, and so forth.  Furthermore, "s*t" will activate
            any discretionary "s_t" ligature in the font.

            The --altselector-char mechanism uses the features specified by --altselector-feature options.

            The  alternate-selector  character may also be specified in the encoding; see ENCODINGS, below.  See
            Sivan Toledo's article cited in the SEE ALSO section for more information.

       --altselector-feature=feature
            Activate the feature named feature for the --altselector-char mechanism.  Give this option  multiple
            times   to   activate  multiple  features.   This  option  activates  features  only  for  use  with
            --altselector-char; use the --feature option to activate features globally.  Defaults  to  the  salt
            and dlig features.

       --alternates-filter=pattern
       --include-alternates=pattern
       --exclude-alternates=pattern
       --clear-alternates
            Limit  the  alternate  characters  that otftotfm will select.  An alternate is used if it matches at
            least one of the --include patterns, and none of the --exclude patterns.  Each  pattern  applies  to
            all  following  features,  except  that  the  --clear  option  clears any accumulated patterns.  The
            --alternates-filter pattern option acts like  --clear-alternates  followed  by  --include-alternates
            pattern.  For pattern syntax, see GLYPH PATTERNS, below.

            OpenType  fonts  can  have  many  alternates  per  character, most of which aren't interesting.  For
            example, the character "a" in  WarnockPro-Regular  has  five  alternates,  "ordfeminine",  "Asmall",
            "asuperior",  "a.end",  and  "orn.013".   The --altselector-char option lets you cycle through these
            alternates, but it's better to leave out the ones you  don't  want,  to  avoid  overfull  encodings.
            Thus,    if    you    were   only   interested   in   ".end"   variants,   you   might   supply   an
            '--include-alternates="*.end"' option.

            In the command line below, the '*.end' pattern will apply to "aalt" alternates, but  not  to  "salt"
            alternates.
                otftotfm -fsalt --include-alternates="*.end" -faalt ...

       --ligkern=command
            Add  a  LIGKERN  command  to  the  encoding.   For example, '--ligkern "T {L} h"' suppresses any T_h
            ligature in the font.  You can supply multiple --ligkern options.  See ENCODINGS, below.

       --position=command
            Add a POSITION command to the encoding.  For example, '--position "T 10 0 20"'  adds  ten  units  of
            space  to  either  side  of  the  "T"  character.   You can supply multiple --position options.  See
            ENCODINGS, below.

       --unicoding=command
            Add a UNICODING command to the encoding.  For example, '--unicoding "pi1 =: uni03D6"' tells otftotfm
            to  encode  "/pi1"  as  U+03D6  GREEK  PI SYMBOL.  You can supply multiple --unicoding options.  See
            ENCODINGS, below.

       --no-encoding-commands
            Ignore any LIGKERN and/or UNICODING commands in the encoding file.

       --no-default-ligkern
            Don't include otftotfm's default LIGKERN commands.

       --coding-scheme=scheme
            Add a CODINGSCHEME to the encoding.  See ENCODINGS, below.

       --warn-missing
            Warn about encoded characters not supported by the font.  See the WARNMISSING command in  ENCODINGS,
            below.

       --literal-encoding=encoding
            Select  the  dvips(1)  encoding used for the font.  No glyph substitutions will be permitted, so the
            output encoding will equal the input encoding (and otftotfm will not generate an output encoding).

       --base-encodings=file
            Experts only.  Allow the output font to refer to existing "base" fonts.  This can greatly reduce the
            number of base fonts generated by otftotfm.  Each line in the file argument contains a TeX font name
            (as for --name) and a corresponding literal encoding file (as for --literal-encoding); for example:
                WarnoProReg--eka eka
                WarnoProReg--exp1 exp1
            The named fonts must have been created by prior runs of otftotfm on the same  input  OpenType  font,
            with  the  same --extend and --slant options as the current run.  The current output font will refer
            to glyphs from the named base fonts when possible.  If the base fonts cover all glyphs  required  by
            the  output  font,  otftotfm  won't  generate any new base fonts at all.  The file can also refer to
            dotless-J fonts using the following syntax:
                WarnoProReg--lcdfj - dotlessj

   Automatic Mode Options
       -a, --automatic
            Select automatic mode.

       -v vendor, --vendor=vendor
            Set the font vendor name, which is used to locate files within the TDS.  Defaults to "lcdftools".

            In automatic mode, TeX and friends will generally find required  font  files  independently  of  the
            vendor you select.

       --typeface=typeface
            Set  the  font typeface name, which is used to locate files within the TDS.  Defaults to the current
            font's family name with unsuiable characters removed.

       --no-type1
            Do not use cfftot1(1) to create Type 1 fonts corresponding to the OpenType input fonts.

       --no-dotlessj
            Do not use t1dotlessj(1) to create a special  dotless-j  font  when  the  input  font  doesn't  have
            dotless-j.

       --no-truetype
            Do not install TrueType-flavored fonts.

       --type42
            Install TrueType-flavored fonts in translated Type 42 format.

       --no-updmap
            Do  not  run  an updmap(1) program.  This can be useful if you're installing a bunch of fonts; it is
            much faster to run updmap once, at the end, than to run it once per font.

   Output Options
       -n texname, --name=texname
            Set the TeX name of the output font, which is used in font map files  and,  in  automatic  mode,  to
            generate the output filename.  The default is derived from the OpenType font's name and the features
            you selected.

       -p, --pl
            Output human-readable PL and VPL metrics, not binary TFM and VF metrics.  Note:  Otftotfm's  PL  and
            VPL  output  files  are legal, but the fontinst program may not accept them (it has a picky parser).
            Make sure to supply a --coding-scheme; if that doesn't help, run the TFM output through tftopl(1).

       --no-virtual
            Do not generate virtual fonts (VFs and VPLs).  Otftotfm will warn  if  the  selected  font  features
            cannot be implemented without virtual fonts.

       --no-encoding
            Do not generate an encoding file.

       --output-encoding[=file]
            Only  generate  an encoding file; do not generate any other output.  The encoding file is written to
            file, or to standard output if no file argument is supplied.

       --no-map
            Do not generate a font map line for the font.

   File Location Options
       --tfm-directory=dir
       --pl-directory=dir
       --vf-directory=dir
       --vpl-directory=dir
       --encoding-directory=dir
       --type1-directory=dir
       --truetype-directory=dir
       --type42-directory=dir
            Set the directory used for various output types.  Each  directory  may  be  set  by  an  environment
            variable,  and  defaults  to  a  TDS  directory in automatic mode, or to "." otherwise.  Environment
            variable names and default TDS locations are described in the Automatic Mode section above.

       --map-file=filename
            Set file in which otftotfm will write a font map line for the font.  The  default  is  the  standard
            output      in      manual      mode,      and     "TEXMF/fonts/map/dvips/vendor/vendor.map"     (or
            "TEXMF/dvips/vendor/vendor.map" on older installations) in automatic mode.

   Miscellaneous Options
       --glyphlist=file
            Use file as a Adobe glyph list, which helps translate glyph names  to  Unicode  code  points.   Give
            multiple options to include multiple files.  See ENCODINGS, below, for more information.

       -V, --verbose
            Write progress messages to standard error.

       --no-create
            Do  not  create  or  modify  any  files.   Instead,  write messages about the program's hypothetical
            progress to standard error.

       --force
            Generate all files, even if it looks like versions are already installed.

       -q, --quiet
            Do not generate any error messages.

       --kpathsea-debug=flags
            Set path searching debugging flags.  See the Kpathsea manual for details.

       -h, --help
            Print usage information and exit.

       --version
            Print the version number and some short non-warranty information and exit.

ENCODINGS

       Otftotfm interprets encoding files as Unicode.  For example, say an input  encoding  has  "/dotlessi"  at
       position  10.   Otftotfm  detects  that  position  10 should contain Unicode character U+0131 LATIN SMALL
       LETTER DOTLESS I, and uses the  font's  glyph  for  that  character  (possibly  modified  by  any  active
       features).  The selected glyph might not be named "dotlessi"; only the Unicode value matters.

       Otftotfm  assigns  Unicode  values  to  glyph  names  using  a  table  published by Adobe (SEE ALSO has a
       reference), with extensions for TeX.  For more fine-grained control, add UNICODING commands to the  input
       encoding file.  These commands have the following format:
           % UNICODING glyph =: choice1 [choice2 ...] ;
       This tells otftotfm that the glyph named glyph translates into the first Unicode value in the choice list
       that has a character in the font.  Glyph and the choices are PostScript glyph names; the initial "%" sign
       is  required; and each UNICODING line can contain multiple commands, separated by spaced semicolons.  For
       example,
           % UNICODING pi1 =: uni03D6 ;
       encodes the character "/pi1" as U+03D6 GREEK PI SYMBOL, and
           % UNICODING Delta =: uni0394 uni2206 ;
       makes U+0394 GREEK CAPITAL LETTER DELTA preferred to U+2206 INCREMENT as an encoding for  "/Delta".   You
       can also supply glyph names:
           % UNICODING Delta =: Deltagreek Delta ;
       A  mapping  with no Unicode values removes that glyph from the input encoding.  For instance, this erases
       any f-ligature characters from the encoding:
           % UNICODING ff =: ; fi =: ; fl =: ; ffi =: ; ffl =: ;
       The slots are available for otftfm's own use, for example for other characters required by the font.  (If
       the  f-ligatures themselves are required by the font, for instance by a 'liga' feature, then they will be
       stored into their old slots when possible.)  Map a glyph to 'emptyslot' if you don't want otftotfm to use
       the slot.  For example, this will leave the 'ff' slot unused if the font has no 'ff' glyph:
           % UNICODING ff =: ff emptyslot ;
       (Note  that  most OpenType fonts provide a visible representation for unused encoding slots, namely a box
       with an X inside.)

       LIGKERN comments in the encoding can add ligatures and  inhibit  kerns,  as  in  afm2tfm(1).   To  add  a
       ligature, say:
           % LIGKERN glyph1 glyph2 =: result ;
       The  "=:"  operator  indicates a normal ligature, where both the input glyphs are removed and replaced by
       result.  To preserve the left-hand glyph, for an effect like "glyph1 glyph2 =: glyph1 result", use  "|=:"
       instead; to preserve the right-hand glyph, use "=:|".  To remove all kerns between two characters, say:
           % LIGKERN glyph1 {} glyph2 ;
       A "*" matches any character, so
           % LIGKERN a {} * ;
       removes all kerns with "a" as the left-hand character, and
           % LIGKERN * {} * ;
       removes all kerns.

       Otftotfm  also  supports  extended syntax for setting kern values and inhibiting ligatures.  To add an n-
       unit kern between two glyphs, say:
           % LIGKERNX glyph1 {n} glyph2 ;
       where n is an integer.  This:
           % LIGKERNX glyph1 {L} glyph2 ;
       inhibits any ligature between glyph1 and glyph2.  "{LK}" and "{KL}" inhibit both ligatures and kerns.

       You can set the --boundary-char and --altselector-char from an encoding file with commands like this:
           % LIGKERN || = boundarychar ;
           % LIGKERNX ^^ = altselectorchar ;
       As with UNICODING, each LIGKERN or LIGKERNX line can  contain  multiple  commands,  separated  by  spaced
       semicolons.

       Otftotfm has a default set of eight ligatures, namely:
           space l =: lslash ; space L =: Lslash ;
           question quoteleft =: questiondown ; exclam quoteleft =: exclamdown ;
           hyphen hyphen =: endash ; endash hyphen =: emdash ;
           quoteleft quoteleft =: quotedblleft ;
           quoteright quoteright =: quotedblright
       LIGKERN  commands  in  the encoding file and --ligkern options can override these defaults, or supply the
       --no-default-ligkern option to turn them off.

       The POSITION command shifts a glyph within its bounding box.  The syntax is
           % POSITION glyph pdx pdy adx ;
       This will add pdx units of space to glyph's left edge; raise it up by pdy units; and add adx units to its
       width.  For example, to add 10 units of space to either side of the "T" glyph, supply
           % POSITION T 10 0 20
       To move the "degree" symbol up by 20 units, supply
           % POSITION degree 0 20 0

       The  CODINGSCHEME  command  specifies the coding scheme for fonts using this encoding.  This is a string,
       less than 40 characters long and containing no  parentheses,  that  classifies  the  encoding  for  TeX's
       purposes.  Sample coding schemes include "TEX TEXT", "TEX MATH ITALIC", and "EXTENDED TEX FONT ENCODING -
       LATIN".  For example:
           % CODINGSCHEME EXTENDED TEX FONT ENCODING - LATIN
       Most tools ignore the coding scheme; fontinst is an exception.  Otftotfm uses the  encoding's  PostScript
       name for the default coding scheme.

       Finally,  the WARNMISSING command makes any glyphs not supported by the input font appear as black boxes.
       The dvips(1) processor will also print a warning when encountering these glyphs.  For example:
           % WARNMISSING yes

       The --unicoding, --ligkern,  --position,  --coding-scheme,  and  --warn-missing  options  add  UNICODING,
       LIGKERN/LIGKERNX,  POSITION,  CODINGSCHEME,  and  WARNMISSING  commands  to an encoding, and can override
       commands in the encoding itself.  Some common encoding files have commands  that  are  inappropriate  for
       OpenType  fonts;  for  example,  "t1.enc" hard-codes f-ligatures, which can cause problems with small-cap
       fonts.  Supply the --no-encoding-commands option to ignore all commands from the encoding file.  Commands
       from options like --ligkern are processed in any case.

   New Glyphs
       New  glyphs,  such  as  ligatures  and  contextual  substitutions, are added to the encoding in any empty
       spaces, using their original locations when possible.  If the encoding doesn't have enough space for  all
       new glyphs, shorter ligatures composed of unaccented letters get precedence.

   Synthetic Glyphs
       Otftotfm  can  synthesize  some  glyphs  using  virtual  font  manipulations,  if a required glyph is not
       available in the input font. Specifically, it will synthesize:

       cwm                   TeX's compound word mark (a zero-width "strut" rule with height equal to the font's
                             x-height)
       ascendercompwordmark  "cwm" with height equal to the font's ascenders
       capitalcompwordmark   "cwm" with height equal to the font's capitals
       visualspace           A square cup used to represent spaces
       dotlessj              A dotless "j", synthesized with t1dotlessj(1)
       dblbracketleft        Kerned version of "[["
       dblbracketright       Kerned version of "]]"
       bardbl                The parallel symbol "||"
       asteriskmath          Vertically-centered "*"
       ringfitted            Ring accent centered on the width of "A"
       twelveudash           2/3-em-wide dash
       threequartersemdash   3/4-em-wide dash
       centigrade            "(degrees)C"
       interrobang           Combined "?!" symbol
       interrobangdown       Inverted interrobang
       pertenthousand        Per-ten-thousand sign (% with two extra 0s)
       IJ                    "IJ" ligature
       ij                    "ij" ligature
       Germandbls            "SS" (a capital sharp-s)
       SSsmall               Small-capital version of "SS"
       FFsmall               Small-capital version of "FF"
       FIsmall               Small-capital version of "FI"
       FLsmall               Small-capital version of "FL"
       FFIsmall              Small-capital version of "FFI"
       FFLsmall              Small-capital version of "FFL"

GLYPH PATTERNS

       The  --include-subs and --include-alternates options, and their --exclude and --*-filter variants, accept
       the following types of pattern.

       •  Glyph names.  Example: "Aacute".  For PostScript-flavored fonts, use otfinfo(1)'s -g option to  see  a
          font's  glyph  names,  and  "cfftot1 font.otf | t1testpage" to generate a PostScript file showing each
          glyph.

       •  Glyph name patterns using the shell-style glob-matching rules: "*" matches any number  of  characters,
          "?" matches any single character, and "[...]"  matches any character in a set.  Example: "*.end".

       •  Unicode  category  properties  in  angle brackets.  Examples: "<Letter>", "<UppercaseLetter>", "<Lu>".
          The complete list of both short and  long  names:  Letter/L,  UppercaseLetter/Lu,  LowercaseLetter/Ll,
          TitlecaseLetter/Lt,  ModifierLetter/Lm,  OtherLetter/Lo;  Number/N, DecimalNumber/Nd, LetterNumber/Nl,
          OtherNumber/No;  Punctuation/P,   ConnectorPunctuation/Pc,   DashPunctuation/Pd,   OpenPunctuation/Ps,
          ClosePunctuation/Pe,   InitialPunctuation/Pi,   FinalPunctuation/Pf,   OtherPunctuation/Po;  Symbol/S,
          MathSymbol/Sm,   CurrencySymbol/Sc,   ModifierSymbol/Sk,   OtherSymbol/So;   Mark/M,   SpacingMark/Mc,
          EnclosingMark/Me,     NonspacingMark/Mn;     Separator/Z,     SpaceSeparator/Zs,     LineSeparator/Zl,
          ParagraphSeparator/Zp; Other/C, Surrogate/Cs,  Format/Cf,  Control/Cc,  PrivateUse/Co,  Unassigned/Cn.
          Category values current as of Unicode 4.0.

       •  Unicode ranges.  Example: "U+007f-U+008C".

       The "!" prefix negates a pattern, and you can separate multiple patterns by spaces.

FEATURE DIRECTORY

       This  section lists features common to Western OpenType fonts and describes how otftotfm handles them for
       common fonts.  Please send the author mail if otftotfm does not handle a feature you need, or you believe
       it handles some feature incorrectly.

       aalt, Access All Alternates
            Lets  the  user  choose between all available alternate forms for a character.  This includes things
            like superscript and subscript variants, different styles (swash, for example), and even  ornaments.
            The  --altselector-feature=aalt  option  can  help  an  --altselector-char  provide useful access to
            alternates, but the aalt feature isn't usually useful on its own.  Try the salt  and  calt  features
            instead.
       c2sc, Small Capitals From Capitals
            Replaces  capital  letters  with  small  capitals:  a sort of converse of the more conventional smcp
            feature, which replaces lower-case letters with small capitals.  Supported.
       calt, Contextual Alternates
            Lets the user choose between context-appropriate swash forms for each character.  For example, given
            the  word  "DREW"  in  a  cursive typeface, the "R E W" might be translated to calmer forms than the
            initial "D".  There may be more than one choice for a given letter, in which case the user should be
            able to select among them.  TeX can't support complex contextual alternates, or alternate selection,
            but otftotfm supports some fonts quite well.  The input encoding should have lots of empty space for
            variants, and it should specify a boundary character.  See also cswh.
       case, Case-Sensitive Forms
            Shifts  punctuation  marks  up to a position that works well with all-capital-letter sequences.  For
            example, the hyphen character, which generally centers vertically on the x-height, is raised  up  to
            center  vertically  on a capital letter.  Also replaces text figures with lining figures, and accent
            marks with forms more appropriate for capitals.  Supported.
       cpsp, Capital Spacing
            Adds a bit of space on either side of each capital letter.  Supported.  (However, the  OpenType  tag
            registry  suggests that cpsp be on by default, but applying to all-caps text only; TeX cannot easily
            implement that contextual intelligence.)
       cswh, Contextual Swash
            Lets the user choose between context-appropriate swash forms for each character.   For  example,  in
            the  words  "Ab  AC", the first "A" might be translated to a swash form, while the second might not.
            There may be more than one choice for a given letter, in which case  the  user  should  be  able  to
            select among them.  Otftotfm supports some fonts quite well.  The input encoding should have lots of
            empty space for swash variants, and it should specify a boundary character.  See also calt and swsh.
       dlig, Discretionary Ligatures
            Activates uncommon ligatures, such as "c_t", "s_p", and "s_t".  Supported.
       dnom, Denominators
            Replaces digits and some punctuation marks with smaller forms sitting on the baseline, intended  for
            fraction denominators.  Supported.
       fina, Terminal Forms
            Substitutes  appropriate  forms  for  letters  occurring at the ends of words.  This feature doesn't
            select swash variants; it's intended for normal use, and the specification recommends that it be  on
            by  default.   Partially supported: TeX will only treat spaces as the ends of words, where a correct
            implementation would probably include punctuation too.  See cswh for selecting swash variants active
            at the ends of words.
       frac, Fractions
            Replaces simple sequences like "1/2" with nice-looking fractions.  Supported, but beware: many fonts
            will translate "11/32" into "1" + "1/3" + "2".
       hist, Historical Forms
            Replaces characters with historical variants.  Usually, this means at least translating regular  "s"
            to long "s".  Supported.
       kern, Kerning
            Adjusts  the  space between characters (pair kerning).  Generally supported, and you should probably
            turn it on.  As a special case, "-fkern" can also read kerning information from the "kern" table  in
            conventional TrueType fonts.
       liga, Standard Ligatures
            Activates  common  ligatures,  such  as  "f_f",  "f_i",  "f_f_j",  and  (in some Adobe fonts) "T_h".
            Generally supported, and you should probably turn it on.
       lnum, Lining Figures
            Uses lining figures, the set of digits that are all about as high as  capital  letters.   Supported.
            Compare onum; see also pnum and tnum.
       numr, Numerators
            Replaces  digits  and  some  punctuation  marks  with  smaller,  raised  forms intended for fraction
            numerators.  Supported, but not usually useful.
       onum, Oldstyle Figures
            Uses old-style figures, also known as text figures.  This is the set of digits that  have  ascenders
            and descenders like lower-case letters.  Supported.  Compare lnum; see also pnum and tnum.
       ordn, Ordinals
            Designed  for Spanish and French.  Replaces ordinal numbers, such as "2.o", with forms where the "o"
            is raised, and replaces the sequence "No" with an integrated glyph.  Supported.
       ornm, Ornaments
            Replaces some alphabetic characters in the font with ornaments, and links the bullet character to  a
            set  of  all  bullet-like  ornaments,  from which the user can choose.  Partially supported: TeX can
            handle alphabetic substitutions, but not bullet choice.
       pnum, Proportional Figures
            Digits will have different widths.  Supported.  Compare tnum; see also lnum and onum.
       salt, Stylistic Alternates
            Lets the user choose between stylistic alternate forms  for  a  character.   The  --altselector-char
            mechanism  provides useful access to this feature.  If you turn on salt globally, otftotfm takes the
            first alternate form whenever there's more than one  choice.   See  also  aalt  and  ss01;  salt  is
            generally more useful than aalt for TeX, since it refers exclusively to stylistic alternates.
       sinf, Scientific Inferiors
            Replaces  digits  and  some  punctuation  marks with smaller, lowered forms intended for subscripts.
            Supported.  Compare subs.
       size, Optical Size
            This feature stores information about the range of optical sizes for which the  font  was  intended.
            There is no point in selecting it with otftotfm, since it should not change the font's appearance in
            any way.
       smcp, Small Capitals
            Replaces lower-case letters with small capitals.  Supported.  Compare c2sc.
       ss01-ss20, Stylistic Sets 1-20
            Replaces characters with a uniform set of stylistic alternates.  Differs from features like salt  in
            that  a  Stylistic  Set  is  uniform:  an  ssXX feature should never involve selection from a set of
            possible alternate characters.  Supported.
       subs, Subscript
            Replaces characters with smaller, lowered forms intended for subscripts.  Supported.  Compare  sinf;
            some fonts support sinf but not subs.
       sups, Superscript
            Replaces  digits,  some  punctuation  marks,  and some lower-case letters with smaller, raised forms
            intended for superscripts.  Supported.
       swsh, Swash
            Activates all swash forms for each character. There may be more than one swash form, in  which  case
            otftotfm will pick the first one listed.  Supported, except that swash variants other than the first
            are inaccessible.  Note that some fonts with swash variants support the cswh feature exclusively.
       tnum, Tabular Figures
            All digits will have the same width, so that tables and the like will  align  visually.   Supported.
            Compare pnum; see also lnum and onum.
       zero, Slashed Zero
            Replaces the zero character with a slashed zero.  Supported.

DIAGNOSTICS AND TROUBLESHOOTING

       no writable directory found in $TEXMF
            Otftotfm  could  not  find  a writable directory in your $TEXMFVAR or $TEXMF path.  Did you create a
            $HOME/.texmf-var   or   $HOME/texmf   directory?    If    so,    run    the    command    "kpsewhich
            --expand-path='$TEXMF'" to verify that directory is not being found.  You may need to set your TEXMF
            environment variable, to '{!!'"$HOME"'/texmf,!!$TEXMFMAIN}', for instance (note the different  kinds
            of quotes; on my machine, this expands to '{!!/home/kohler/texmf,!!$TEXMFMAIN}').

       'char' has no encoding, ignoring kern removal
       (or ligature removal, lig/kern removal, or ligature)
            These  messages  indicate  a  slight  problem  with  your encoding file: one of the LIGKERN commands
            referred to a character not present in the encoding.  This might be due  to  a  misspelling  in  the
            LIGKERN  command or the encoding file, or it might be an oversight.  Either fix the encoding file or
            ignore the warning.

       can't map 'char' to Unicode
            Another encoding file problem: One of the glyph names in an UNICODING block could not  be  converted
            to  Unicode.   This  is  problematic  since  UNICODING  exists  wholly to translate glyph names into
            Unicode.  Fix the encoding file or ignore the warning.

       not enough room in encoding, ignoring N glyph(s) ...
            There wasn't space in the encoding for all the glyphs referred to by the features you selected.  For
            example,  maybe  the  font had more ligatures than there were empty slots in the encoding.  Fix this
            warning by selecting fewer features, or by using an encoding with more  empty  slots,  such  as  the
            7t.enc encoding distributed with otftotfm.

       The '-a' option did not install my font correctly.
            Try  again with the '--verbose' option, which causes otftotfm to explain its behavior.  Note that by
            default, otftotfm will not re-install files already present in your system's TeX  search  paths  (in
            the current directory, for instance).  Use '--force' to override this behavior.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

       How can I get a small-caps "SS" in place of the German sharp-S?
            Supply the option '--unicoding "germandbls =: SSsmall"'.

       How can I prevent f-ligatures from forming in a small-caps font?
            This  should happen automatically, but some overzealous encoding files add f-ligatures even when the
            font doesn't request them.  Try the "--no-encoding-commands" option if this is a problem for you.

       Otftotfm seems to take a long time.
            Use the -V option to see what it's doing.  Often the culprit is the  updmap(1)  program;  if  you're
            planning to run otftotfm multiple times, give it the --no-updmap option and run updmap manually when
            you're done.

       How can I refer to the different forms of phi?
            Otftotfm follows TeX practice and widely-distributed TeX encoding vectors, so  "/phi"  in  an  input
            encoding  vector  should map to a "straight" phi and "/phi1" should map to a "loopy" phi.  Note that
            TeX practice differs from the PostScript standard naming conventions, in which "/phi" is "loopy" and
            "/phi1"  is  "straight";  this  means  that otftotfm may map "/phi" in an input encoding vector to a
            font's "/phi1" glyph, and vice versa.  Perhaps most unambiguously, you can use  "/uni03D5"  for  the
            "straight" form and "/uni03C6" for the "loopy" form.

       How can I get lining figures (that is, normal line-height digits) with small caps ('-fsmcp')?
            Many  fonts  use  old-style  figures by default with small caps. Since the default is not specified,
            it's wise to explicitly supply '-flnum' or '-fonum'.

BUGS

       See the documentation for --pl above if you have problems running otftotfm's output through fontinst.

SEE ALSO

       pltotf(1),  tftopl(1),  vptovf(1),   afm2tfm(1),   dvips(1),   cfftot1(1),   otfinfo(1),   t1dotlessj(1),
       t1testpage(1), ttftotype42(1), kpsewhich(1), updmap(1)

       Adobe Type 1 Font Format

       Adobe  Technical  Notes  #5176,  The  Compact Font Format Specification, and #5177, The Type 2 Charstring
       Format

       OpenType Specification, Version 1.4

       A Directory Structure for TeX Files, http://www.tug.org/tds/

       Kpathsea: A library for path searching, http://www.tug.org/kpathsea/

       Sivan       Toledo,        Exploiting        Rich        Fonts,        TUGboat        21(2),        2000,
       http://www.tug.org/TUGboat/Articles/tb21-2/tb67tole.pdf

       Michel Goossens, Frank Mittelbach, and Alexander Samarin, The LaTeX Companion (for information on the .fd
       file format)

       Adobe Systems, "Unicode and Glyph Names".  Refers to the glyphlist.txt file used to translate glyph names
       to Unicode code points.  http://partners.adobe.com/public/developer/opentype/index_glyph.html

AUTHOR

       Eddie Kohler (ekohler@gmail.com)

       Thanks  to Karl Berry, Marco Kuhlmann, Adam Lindsay, Bruce D'Arcus, Thomas Esser, Claire Connelly, Nelson
       H.F. Beebe, and Ryuji Suzuki for  suggestions,  bug  reports,  and  help.   Particular  thanks  to  Achim
       Blumensath and Michael Zedler for suggestions and patches, some of them extensive.