Xerox 721P87491 manual Fonts, Adobe Type1 PostScript fonts, Font Typeface

Page 28

POSTSCRIPT

Fonts

 

 

 

 

DocuPrint NPS contains 51 PostScript Type 1 fonts listed in the

 

 

 

 

following table. These fonts are standard Type 1 fonts licensed

 

 

 

 

through Adobe Systems, Inc. However, because DocuPrint NPS may

 

 

 

 

contain different versions of fonts than other PostScript devices,

 

 

 

 

there could be slight differences in shapes of characters and the

 

 

 

 

character sets of certain fonts.

 

 

 

 

Table 2-1.Adobe Type1 PostScript fonts

 

 

Font

Typeface

 

 

Courier

Courier, Bold, Oblique, BoldOblique

 

 

Helvetica

Helvetica, Bold, Oblique, BoldOblique, Light, LightOblique,

 

 

 

 

Black, BlackOblique

 

 

 

 

Condensed, Condensed Oblique, Condensed Bold,

 

 

 

 

Condensed BoldOblique

 

 

 

 

Narrow, Narrow Bold, Narrow Oblique, Narrow BoldOblique

 

 

ITC Avant Garde Gothic

Book, BookOblique, Demi, DemiOblique

 

 

ITC Bookman

Demi, DemiItalic, Light, LightItalic

 

 

ITC Garamond

Light, LightItalic, Bold, BoldItalic

 

 

ITC Korinna

Korinna, KursivRegular, Bold, KursivBold

 

 

ITC Zapf Chancery

MediumItalic

 

 

ITC Zapf Dingbats

Medium

 

 

New Century Schoolbook

Roman, Bold, Italic, BoldItalic

 

 

Palatino

Roman, Bold, Italic, BoldItalic

 

 

Symbol

Medium

 

 

Times

Roman, Bold, Italic, BoldItalic

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A set of Type 0 OCF Chinese fonts is also available from Xerox.

 

 

 

 

These fonts are composite, “double-byte” fonts.

 

 

 

 

Note: Type 0 fonts that you load on the printer controller must be

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

either fonts purchased from Xerox, or fonts that meet specifications

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

provided by Xerox. Each composite font is stored in its own

 

 

 

 

subdirectory. Loading of Type 0 CID fonts is not supported.

 

 

 

 

Type 3 fonts can be installed from a DOS-formatted floppy using the

 

 

 

 

Install Fonts From Floppy command. Type 3 fonts will install only if:

The fonts are in the floppy’s root directory.

Each font is in a separate file.

Each font file has a .ps extension.

Each font file contains a “/FontName” definition with a unique name.

For MICR systems, MICR PostScript E13B font is provided on diskette. These fonts are in Type 3 format. For more information,

2-2

XEROX DOCUPRINT NPS GUIDE TO USING PAGE DESCRIPTION LANGUAGES

Image 28
Contents Version 7.1 August 2000 721P87491 Page Operation safety Laser safetyOzone information Conductor may result in risk of electrical shock. grounding Table of contents PostScript Vipp IndexViii About this guide ContentsConventions Introduction Related information Related publicationsPostScript publications HP PCL 5 publications Vipp publicationPCL Maintaining image qualityOFF PCL 5 media support PCL 5 font supportPCL 5 fonts installed with NPS software PJL commands PCL command supportPCL Copy command PCL Copy command example Duplex PCL Copy command examplePCL Duplex commands PCL Duplex commands DocuPrint NPS Collated HP LaserJet 4siPCL Job Separation command PCL Paper Source command tray assignment PCL media selectionPrecedence in selecting media PCL Output Bin command PCL Offset Registration commandsPCL 5c support PCL 5 coding recommendations PCL 5c coding recommendations PCL 5c functions not applicable to DocuPrint NPSDriver recommendations for PCL 5c Limitations for custom PCL 5c driversImplementation-dependent operations Coordinate system default matrixFloating-point arithmetic and math operators Adobe Type1 PostScript fonts FontsFont Typeface Loading fonts User-defined fontsUsing Adobe Type 1 fonts Type 1 fontsUsing a Type 1 font in a document Producing Type 1 fonts for use with DocuPrintPostScript language extensions PostScript with embedded PJL commandsSystem Dict User Dict Server DictIdleTime Dictionary Status DictDfltkIdleArry needflush Nonstandard definitions Printer resolution and resolution enhancement Appearance consistencyExamples of nonstandard definitions Statusdict UserdictDpi image Printed on a 300 dpi printer Printer imaging characteristics Font consistency Proprietary PostScript extensionsControl-Z and superfluous errors Control-D as binary data and end-of-jobSolution to control-Z and control-D problems Multiple jobs in one input file DocuPrint NPS implementation of PostScript Level Simulated mixed plexScan conversion details Printer Controller operationsStroke Fill ShapesCurved shapes Zero-width lines strokesImages Image quality Rendering of color and gray values transfer function PostScript printer description PPD files Implementation limitsImplementation limits File operators and standard devicesQuantity Limit Description Path limits PostScript VM limitsSetCacheDevice Device orientation and setscreen operatorObsolete operators-banddevice, framedevice, renderbands PostScript storage object size limitsArc to Bezier conversion-pathforall Print performance related to image printing Creating the necessary PostScript Ccitt Group 3Scan order and rotation Purpose Image orientation mismatch aImage orientation mismatch B 10.Image pixel sequence example Considerations SummaryScan resolution and scaling 11.Scaling and resolution example12.PostScript with embedded image normal scan order MaxX exch def /minY exch def /minX exch def 14.Actual PostScript print Page Vipp Functionality Operating environmentVipp line mode extension XGFNub Page Symbols CcittIndex PCL PPD Index