On 05-Nov-05 Robert Goulding wrote: > On Nov 4, 2005, at 10:46 PM, T. Kurt Bond wrote: > >> What's a good way to typeset arbitrary fractions like 1/100 and 1/1000 >> after the styel of \(12? >> > Preprocess with eqn (i.e., groff -e -ms): > > .EQ > delim $$ > .EN > .LP > We can write one-thousandth as $1 smallover 1000$.
That's a bit off the original question! \(12, like \(14 and \(34, is a glyph in its own right (indeed with its own iso-8859-1 code, so you should be able to see ¼ ½ ¾) and I presume this is the style which Kurt wants to emulate. So you see a small raised "1", a sloping bar which goes well under it (almost to the left of the "1", and then a small "2" on the baseline, well tucked under the sloping bar. The ordinary AScII "/" does not have the slope to make this look right, and it's better to use the similar character in the Symbol character set (PostScropt name "fraction") whose groff name is "\(f/" In fact, when I set \(12 and \(f/ side by side in TR and view at hign magnification, the two sloping bars seem to be identical (which is what you would expect in a properly designed font family). However, this would not necessarily transfer to other fonts, since the \(f/ in standard PostScript occurs only in the Symbol font and so there is only one version of it. None the less, I have made the comparison in some standard Adobe font families (Times, Bookman, Palatino, Helvetica) and the bar in \(12 in all seems to be identical to \(f/ in Symbol. So, with that settled, we can address Kurt's question. The following is only a version which I judge by eye to be about right, in that it seems to give the same results for the composed fraction when applied to "1/2" for which there is a single glyph. .de frac .nr n0 \\n[.s] .nr n1 \\n[n0]*6/10 .nr dn (\\n[n0]-\\n[n1])*8/10 \v'-\\n[dn]p'\s[\\n[n1]]\\$1\s0\v'\\n[dn]p'\[f/]\s[\\n[n1]]\\$2\s0 .. Test it: \f[HR]\s[40]\(12 .frac 1 2 .frac 999 1000 .sp \f[TR]\s[30]\(12 .frac 1 2 .frac 999 1000 .sp \s[30]\(12\f[TB] .frac 1 2 .frac 999 1000 Note that it seems fine in HR (first test), but in TR the "1" and "2" in ".frac 1 2" are in TR while in "\(12" these figures seem to be heavier (though not quite bold), as confirmed in the third test. So that's the basics of doing it, but clearly you have to watch out for detail depending on the environment. Best wishes to all, Ted. -------------------------------------------------------------------- E-Mail: (Ted Harding) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Fax-to-email: +44 (0)870 094 0861 Date: 05-Nov-05 Time: 09:04:27 ------------------------------ XFMail ------------------------------ _______________________________________________ Groff mailing list Groff@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/groff