Blake, you may find it easier to use the install-font.sh script that is distributed on the website of the mom macros: https://www.schaffter.ca/mom/mom-05.html#install-font
(Brandon, I still intend to posixify that script, but I fell off the edge of the world and it's a long climb back up.) On Mon, Jan 30, 2023 at 11:51 AM Blake McBride <bl...@mcbride.name> wrote: > Hi Branden, > > Thanks a lot for the help!!! However, I am having trouble interpreting > your docs. > > Please forgive me. Although I am a software engineer and have been using > nroff/troff/groff for nearly 40 years, I never really got into the details > behind fonts and their various formats. I basically know very little about > them. The basic fonts that come with nroff/troff/groff have generally met > my needs. > > 1. I am using PDF (not PS). > > 2. As I mentioned, I have .otf, .ttf, .woff, and .woff2 files. So my > question is, can I use any of those, or do I need to convert them to > another format? > > 2.a. If I need to convert them, which do I start with, and what am I > converting them to? > > 2.b. How do I convert them? > > 3. What do I install, and where do I install them? Is there a special > procedure besides just copying them? > > 4. Do I need to do something special to give them a name within an mm > context? > > After all of that, doing > > \f[YOURNEWFONT]Blake McBride\f[] > > seems easy enough. > > If I can understand this and get it working, I would be happy to produce > formal documentation for inclusion with GROFF (if desired). > > Thanks! > > Blake McBride > > > > > On Mon, Jan 30, 2023 at 10:20 AM G. Branden Robinson < > g.branden.robin...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > Hi Blake, > > > > At 2023-01-30T09:28:50-0600, Blake McBride wrote: > > > I have been using the default groff fonts for many happy years. > > > However, I need to produce a document with a machine-generated > > > signature. There are plenty of adequate signature fonts out there. > > > However, I do not know how to make groff use them. > > > > > > I downloaded a font. It came with files with the .otf, .ttf, .woff, > > > and .woff2 extensions. What are the exact steps I need to use to use > > > them in a groff/mm document? (I only want one line to use the special > > > font. The rest of the document can use the regular groff fonts.) > > > > The first thing to do is to make the font visible to the output driver, > > which will probably be "ps" or "pdf". > > > > Here are some instructions from the grops(1) page in groff Git. > > > > TrueType and other font formats > > TrueType fonts can be used with grops if converted first to Type 42 > > format, a PostScript wrapper equivalent to the PFA format described > > in pfbtops(1). Several methods exist to generate a Type 42 wrapper; > > some of them involve the use of a PostScript interpreter such as > > Ghostscript—see gs(1). > > > > One approach is to use FontForge, a font editor that can convert > > most outline font formats. Here’s an example of using the Roboto > > Slab Serif font with groff. Several variables are used so that you > > can more easily adapt it into your own script. > > > > MAP=/usr/local/share/groff/1.23.0/font/devps/generate/text.map > > TTF=/usr/share/fonts/truetype/roboto/slab/RobotoSlab-Regular.ttf > > BASE=$(basename "$TTF") > > INT=${BASE%.ttf} > > PFA=$INT.pfa > > AFM=$INT.afm > > GFN=RSR > > DIR=$HOME/.local/groff/font > > mkdir -p "$DIR"/devps > > fontforge -lang=ff -c "Open(\"$TTF\");\ > > Generate(\"$DIR/devps/$PFA\");" > > afmtodit "$DIR/devps/$AFM" "$MAP" "$DIR/devps/$GFN" > > printf "$BASE\t$PFA\n" >> "$DIR/devps/download" > > > > fontforge and afmtodit may generate warnings depending on the > > attributes of the font. The test procedure is simple. > > > > printf ".ft RSR\nHello, world!\n" | groff -F "$DIR" > hello.ps > > > > Once you’re satisfied that the font works, you may want to generate > > any available related styles (for instance, Roboto Slab also has > > “Bold”, “Light”, and “Thin” styles) and set up GROFF_FONT_PATH in > > your environment to include the directory you keep the generated > > fonts in so that you don’t have to use the -F option. > > > > Ensure that you do the test procedure shown, before worrying about macro > > package integration. > > > > Once this works (please reply to the list if it doesn't), the mm usage > > issue can be tackled. > > > > > I need to produce a document with a machine-generated signature. > > > > In mm this requires some context. Are you using one of the memorandum > > types ("MT") or one of the letter formats ("LT")? If so I'll have do > > some digging, because the signature line is automatically printed and > > I'll need to work up a recommendation for how to override that cleanly > > (or someone who's more of an mm expert than I am may have ideas). > > > > If not, and you're outputting the signature line like any other > > formatted text, it should be straightforward. > > > > Put in a line like this. > > > > \f[YOURNEWFONT]Blake McBride\f[] > > > > ...where YOURNEWFONT is the groff name you have given to the font you > > installed using the procedure above. > > > > Let us know if this helps, or doesn't. > > > > Regards, > > Branden > > > -- T. Kurt Bond, tkurtb...@gmail.com, https://tkurtbond.github.io