amsfonts.faq, last updated 6-Jan-1995 Frequently Asked Questions about the AMSFonts Distribution %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% (1) I'm using LaTeX---How do I get bold greek, or bold italic letters a,A,b,B,... in math? ---Get the amsbsy package in the amslatex distribution, which provides a \boldsymbol command that can be applied to Greek and Latin letters (e.g., \boldsymbol{\beta} or \boldsymbol{M}). (This package is not tucked away in the amsfonts distribution because the bold fonts that will most often be required---cmmib and cmbsy---are considered now [1994] to be part of the standard LaTeX font set, so that they should be at your disposal whether or not you have the AMSFonts collection installed.) If you have version 2.09 of LaTeX then you'll need to try using version 1.1 of the amsbsy package, which requires a LaTeX extension called `new font selection scheme' (NFSS). Amsbsy version 1.1 and NFSS version 1 can be obtained by anonymous ftp at e-math.ams.org:/ams/amsltx11. But unless you already have NFSS version 1 installed on your system it will probably be to your advantage even in the short run to upgrade to current LaTeX instead of installing NFSS. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% (2) I use a 360dpi printer. Can I use one of the sets of .pk files which are posted on the archive, or do I need to generate my own files from the Metafont source code? If you want pk files for a 360dpi printer, the simplest thing to do is to retrieve the 300dpi pk files and install them. Since they include the fonts at magsteps 0 through 5, and since each magstep is 1.2 times the previousone, 300dpi at magsteps 0 through 5 is also 360dpi at magsteps 0 through 4. All you will be missing is magstep 5, which most people don't use anyway. In other words, if you look at the contents of the 300dpi distribution, you will see for each font a 300, 329, 360, 432, 518, 622, and 746 dpi pk file.The last five of these are useful for a 360dpi printer. (You will also be lacking \magstephalf, which is 329 at 300dpi. Again, most people don't use it.) If you wish to have pk files for magstephalf and magstep5 at 360dpi, you will have to generate them yourself using Metafont, but you can very likely get along without them. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% (3) How can I get PostScript outlines of AMSFonts? Creating a PostScript outline of a font is an expensive programming task, and the AMS does not have the resources to invest in such a project. A commercial version was jointly developed by Y&Y Inc. and Blue Sky Research. Address information: Y&Y, Inc. 45 Walden St., Suite 2F Concord, MA 01742 USA phone: (800)742-4059 and (508)371-3286 fax: (508)371-2004 Blue Sky Research 534 SW Third Avenue Portland, OR 97204 USA phone: (800)622-8398 and (503)222-9571 fax: (503)222-1643 email: sales@bluesky.com %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% (4) I use OzTeX. The Macintosh AMSFonts package is for use with Textures. What do I do? OzTeX is an implementation of TeX on the Macintosh which behaves similarly to implementations in DOS or Unix. The files for use with DOS and Unix can be used in OzTeX on the Macintosh. In the installation instructions, simply substitute "folder" for "directory" in all cases. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% (5) Why isn't there a 10-point font for cmcsc, cmmib, cmbsy, or cmex included in the AMSFonts package? All of these fonts at 10-point are included in the standard set of fonts with any implementation of TeX. If you do not have them available on your system, re-install the fonts from the original distribution files of your implementation of TeX or contact the distributor/vendor of that implementation of TeX. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% (6) What happened to the fonts msxm* and msym*? A very early release of AMSFonts in the mid-1980s included fonts called msxm5-10 and msym5-10. These were replaced in the late 1980s by the fonts msam5-10 and msbm5-10 (included in this distribution). The msxm and msym fonts were done in a very early version of Metafont which is no longer available. The Metafont code for these fonts will not work with current implementations of Metafont in current operating systems. This means that the msxm and msym fonts cannot be generated. They are not supported by the AMS, and their use or distribution is strongly discouraged. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% (7) I've seen a fancy script font used in AMS publications. Why isn't it included in AMSFonts, and where can I get it? Many AMS publications use some proprietary fonts which were purchased from commercial font vendors and are not in the public domain. This includes the script font which appears in many of our books and journals. Users who wish to purchase such a font in PostScript or TrueType outline form from a commercial font vendor will also need to convert the metrics file from the vendor into a .tfm file using one of the available programs for doing to (Tomas Rokicki's afm2tfm is in the public domain, and Y&Y's afmtotfm is a proprietary program). %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%