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Metafont is a language for specifying graphic shapes, particularly characters in a font of a type, as well as the name of the program which interprets the language. It is commonly used to generate fonts for TeX and related software (TeX and Metafont were developed more-or-less simultaneously by Donald Knuth during the years 1977--1985). See section 2.2.1 Archives, for how to obtain the Metafont program.
BZRto generates a Metafont font `foo.mf' from the input file `foo10.bzr' (the `10' being the design size of the input) if you specify the `-metafont' option, as in:
bzrto -metafont foo |
Presuming Metafont has been installed properly at your site, you can then make both a TFM and a GF file for foo at a size of 10pt and rasterized for your most common output device with the command:
mf '\mode:=localfont; input foo' |
(The single quotes are not seen by Metafont; they just protect the backslash and semicolon from interpretation by your shell.)
The assignment to mode
tells Metafont the name of your output
device. localfont
should be a synonym for some real output
device, defined when Metafont was installed. The GF file will be named
`foo.dpigf', where dpi is the resolution of the
localfont
device.
Given the TFM and GF file, you can now use the font in TeX.
11.1.1 Metafont output at any size Making larger or smaller fonts. 11.1.2 Proofing with Metafont Metafont can help with debugging fonts.