xenial (1) t1unmac.1.gz

Provided by: t1utils_1.39-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       t1unmac - translate a Mac PostScript Type 1 font into PFA or PFB format

SYNOPSIS

       t1unmac [-a|-b] [-r] [input [output]]

DESCRIPTION

       t1unmac  extracts POST resources from a Macintosh PostScript font file and creates a PFA (hexadecimal) or
       PFB (binary) font file. The file input should be in MacBinary  I  or  II,  AppleSingle,  AppleDouble,  or
       BinHex format, or it can be a raw resource fork. If the file is a raw resource fork, you need to give the
       `--raw' option; otherwise t1unmac should automatically figure out what kind of file you have. If the file
       output is not specified output goes to the standard output.

OPTIONS

       --pfa, -a
            Output in PFA (ASCII) format.

       --pfb, -b
            Output in PFB (binary) format. This is the default.

       --raw, -r
            Indicates that the input is a raw resource fork.

       --macbinary
            Indicates that the input is in MacBinary I or II format.

       --applesingle
            Indicates that the input is in AppleSingle format.

       --appledouble
            Indicates that the input is in AppleDouble format.

       --binhex
            Indicates that the input is in BinHex 4.0 format.

       --block-length=num, -l num
            PFB  only:  Set  the  maximum  output block length to num.  The default length is as large as memory
            allows.

       --line-length=num, -l num
            PFA only: Set the maximum length of encrypted lines in the output to  num.   (These  are  the  lines
            consisting wholly of hexadecimal digits.) The default is 64.

EXAMPLES

       On Mac OS X, you can use t1unmac to translate a font into PFA or PFB format as follows:
       % t1unmac --raw FONTFILENAME/..namedfork/rsrc > OUTPUT

SEE ALSO

       t1mac(1), t1ascii(1), t1binary(1), t1asm(1), t1disasm(1)

AUTHORS

       Lee Hetherington (ilh@lcs.mit.edu)
       Eddie Kohler (ekohler@gmail.com)

       Ported    to    Microsoft   C/C++   Compiler   and   MS-DOS   operating   system   by   Kai-Uwe   Herbing
       (herbing@netmbx.netmbx.de).