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virmf (1)
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    NAME
         mf, inimf, virmf - Metafont, a language for  font  and  logo
         design
    
    SYNOPSIS
         mf [options] [commands]
    
    DESCRIPTION
         This manual page is not meant to be  exhaustive.   The  com-
         plete  documentation for this version of TeX can be found in
         the info file or manual Web2C: A TeX implementation.
    
         Metafont reads the program in the specified files  and  out-
         puts  font  rasters  (in gf format) and font metrics (in tfm
         format).   The  Metafont  language  is  described   in   The
         Metafontbook.
    
         Like TeX, Metafont is normally used with  a  large  body  of
         precompiled   macros,  and  font  generation  in  particular
         requires the support of several macro files.   This  version
         of  Metafont  looks  at its command line to see what name it
         was called under.  Both inimf and virmf are symlinks to  the
         mf  executable.   When  called  as  inimf (or when the --ini
         option is given) it can be used to precompile macros into  a
         .base  file.   When  called  as  virmf it will use the plain
         base.  When called under any other name, Metafont  will  use
         that  name  as  the  name of the base to use.   For example,
         when called as mf the mf base is used, which is identical to
         the plain base.  Other bases than plain are rarely used.
    
         The commands given on the command line to the Metafont  pro-
         gram  are  passed to it as the first input line.  (But it is
         often easier to type extended arguments as the  first  input
         line,  since  UNIX  shells tend to gobble up or misinterpret
         Metafont's favorite symbols,  like  semicolons,  unless  you
         quote  them.)   As described in The Metafontbook, that first
         line should begin with a filename, a \controlsequence, or  a
         &basename.
    
         The normal usage is to say
    
              mf   '\mode=<printengine>;  [mag=magstep(n);]'   input
              font
    
         to start processing font.mf.  The single quotes are the best
         way of keeping the Unix shell from misinterpreting the semi-
         colons and from removing the \ character,  which  is  needed
         here to keep Metafont from thinking that you want to produce
         a font called mode.  (Or you can just say mf  and  give  the
         other stuff on the next line, without quotes.) Other control
         sequences, such as batchmode (for silent operation) can also
         appear.   The name font will be the ``jobname'', and is used
         in forming output file names.  If  Metafont  doesn't  get  a
         file  name  in  the  first  line, the jobname is mfput.  The
         default extension, .mf, can be overridden by  specifying  an
         extension explicitly.
    
         A log of error messages goes into the file jobname.log.  The
         output  files  are jobname.tfm and jobname.<number>gf, where
         <number> depends on the resolution and magnification of  the
         font.   The  mode  in  this  example is shown generically as
         <printengine>, a symbolic term for  which  the  name  of  an
         actual  device  or,  most  commonly, the name localfont (see
         below) must be substituted. If the mode is not specified  or
         is  not  valid for your site, Metafont will default to proof
         mode which produces large character images for use  in  font
         design  and refinement.  Proof mode can be recognized by the
         suffix .2602gf after the jobname.  Examples  of  proof  mode
         output  can  be found in Computer Modern Typefaces (Volume E
         of Computers and Typesetting).  The system  of  magsteps  is
         identical  to  the system used by TeX, with values generally
         in the range 0.5, 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0 and 5.0.  A listing  of
         gf  numbers  for 118-dpi, 240-dpi and 300-dpi fonts is shown
         below.
                    MAGSTEP        118 dpi   240 dpi   300 dpi
                mag=magstep(0)       118       240       300
                mag=magstep(0.5)     129       263       329
                mag=magstep(1)       142       288       360
                mag=magstep(2)       170       346       432
                mag=magstep(3)       204       415       518
                mag=magstep(4)       245       498       622
                mag=magstep(5)       294       597       746
    
         Magnification can also be specified not as a magstep but  as
         an arbitrary value, such as 1.315, to create special charac-
         ter sizes.
    
         Before font production can begin, it is necessary to set  up
         the  appropriate  base files.  The minimum set of components
         for font production for a given print-engine is the plain.mf
         macro  file  and  the  local  mode_def  file.  The macros in
         plain.mf can be studied in an appendix to the  Metafontbook;
         they were developed by Donald E. Knuth, and this file should
         never be altered except  when  it  is  officially  upgraded.
         Each  mode_def specification helps adapt fonts to a particu-
         lar  print-engine.   There  is  a  regular   discussion   of
         mode_defs  in  TUGboat,  the journal of the TeX Users Group.
         The local  ones  in  use  on  this  computer  should  be  in
         modes.mf.
    
         The e response to Metafont's error-recovery mode invokes the
         system  default  editor  at the erroneous line of the source
         file.  There is an environment variable, MFEDIT, that  over-
         rides  the  default editor.  It should contain a string with
         "%s" indicating where the filename goes and "%d"  indicating
         where the decimal linenumber (if any) goes.  For example, an
         MFEDIT string for the vi editor can be set with the csh com-
         mand
              setenv MFEDIT "/usr/ucb/vi +%d %s"
    
         A convenient file in  the  library  is  null.mf,  containing
         nothing.   When mf can't find the file it thinks you want to
         input, it keeps asking you for another file name; responding
         `null'  gets  you out of the loop if you don't want to input
         anything.
    
    ONLINE GRAPHICS OUTPUT
         Metafont can use most modern displays, so you  can  see  its
         output  without  printing.   Chapter  23 of The Metafontbook
         describes what you can do.  This implementation of  Metafont
         uses environment variables to determine which display device
         you want to use.  First it looks for a variable MFTERM,  and
         then  for  TERM.  If it can't find either, you get no online
         output.  Otherwise, the value of the variable determines the
         device  to use:  hp2627, sun (for old SunView), tek, uniterm
         (for an Atari ST Tek 4014 emulator), xterm (for  either  X10
         or  X11).  Some of these devices may not be supported in all
         Metafont executables; the  choice  is  made  at  compilation
         time.
    
    OPTIONS
         This version of Metafont understands the  following  command
         line options.
    
         --base base
              Use base as the name of the base to be used, instead of
              the name by which Metafont was called or a %& line.
    
         --help
              Print help message and exit.
    
         --ini
              Be inimf, for dumping bases; this is implicitly true if
              the program is called as inimf.
    
         --interaction mode
              Sets the interaction mode.  The  mode  can  be  one  of
              batchmode,  nonstopmode, scrollmode, and errorstopmode.
              The meaning of these modes is the same as that  of  the
              corresponding commands.
    
         --kpathsea-debug bitmask
              Sets path searching debugging flags  according  to  the
              bitmask.  See the Kpathsea manual for details.
    
         --maketex fmt
              Enable mktexfmt, where fmt must be mf.
    
         --no-maketex fmt
              Disable mktexfmt, where fmt must be mf.
    
         --progname name
              Pretend to be program name.  This affects both the for-
              mat used and the search paths.
    
         --translate-file tcxname
              Use the tcxname translation table.
    
         --version
              Print version information and exit.
    
    ENVIRONMENT
         See the Kpathsearch library documentation (the `Path specif-
         ications' node) for the details of how the environment vari-
         ables are use when searching.  The kpsewhich utility can  be
         used to query the values of the variables.
    
         If the environment variable  TEXMFOUTPUT  is  set,  Metafont
         attempts  to  put  its output files in it, if they cannot be
         put in the current directory.  Again, see tex(1).
    
         MFINPUTS
              Search path for input and openin files.
    
         MFEDIT
              Command template for switching to editor.
    
         MFTERM
              Determines the online graphics display.  If  MFTERM  is
              not  set,  and DISPLAY is set, the Metafont window sup-
              port for X is used.  (DISPLAY must be set to a valid  X
              server specification, as usual.)  If neither MFTERM nor
              DISPLAY is set, TERM is used to guess the  window  sup-
              port to use.
    
    FONT UTILITIES
         A number of utility programs are available.   The  following
         is  a partial list of available utilities and their purpose.
         Consult your local Metafont guru for details.
    
         gftopk   Takes a gf file and produces a more tightly  packed
                  pk font file.
    
         gftodvi  Produces proof sheets for fonts.
    
         gftype   Displays the contents of a  gf  file  in  mnemonics
                  and/or images.
    
         pktype   Mnemonically displays the contents of a pk file.
    
         mft      Formats a source file as shown in  Computer  Modern
                  Typefaces.
    
    FILES
         mf.pool
              Encoded text of Metafont's messages.
    
         *.base
              Predigested Metafont base files.
    
         $TEXMFMAIN/metafont/base/plain.mf
              The standard base.
    
         $TEXMFMAIN/metafont/misc/modes.mf
              The file of mode_defs for your site's various printers
    
    SUGGESTED READING
         Donald E. Knuth, The Metafontbook (Volume C of Computers and
         Typesetting), Addison-Wesley, 1986, ISBN 0-201-13445-4.
         Donald E. Knuth, Metafont: The Program (Volume D of  Comput-
         ers  and  Typesetting),  Addison-Wesley,  1986,  ISBN 0-201-
         13438-1.
         Donald E. Knuth, Computer Modern Typefaces (Volume E of Com-
         puters  and  Typesetting), Addison-Wesley, 1986, ISBN 0-201-
         13446-2.
         TUGboat (the journal of the TeX Users Group).
    
    COMMENTS
         Warning: ``Type  design  can  be  hazardous  to  your  other
         interests.   Once  you  get hooked, you will develop intense
         feelings about letterforms; the medium will intrude  on  the
         messages  that you read.  And you will perpetually be think-
         ing of improvements to the fonts that  you  see  everywhere,
         especially those of your own design.''
    
    SEE ALSO
         gftopk(1),   gftodvi(1),   gftype(1),   mft(1),   pltotf(1),
         tftopl(1).
    
    BUGS
         On January  4,  1986  the  ``final''  bug  in  Metafont  was
         discovered and removed. If an error still lurks in the code,
         Donald E. Knuth promises to pay a finder's fee which doubles
         every year to the first person who finds it.  Happy hunting.
    
    AUTHORS
         Metafont was designed by Donald E. Knuth, who implemented it
         using his Web system for Pascal programs.  It was originally
         ported to Unix by Paul Richards at the University  of  Illi-
         nois  at  Urbana-Champaign.  This page was mostly written by
         Pierre MacKay.
    
    
    
    


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