makejvf(1)
Make Japanese VF file from Japanese TFM file
Description
MAKEJVF
NAME
makejvf - Make Japanese VF file from Japanese TeX TFM file
SYNOPSIS
makejvf [<options>] <TeX TFM file> <PS font TFM>
DESCRIPTION
makejvf
is a tool to generate Japanese VF file from Japanese TeX TFM
(JFM) file for use with dvips.
When processing Japanese texts, pTeX refers to JFM
(min10.tfm, jis.tfm
etc.), which includes definitions of some different
character widths and
metric glue/kerns. For most punctuations and quotation
marks, the character
widths are truncated to less than 1 zw (zenkaku-width; the
width of
ordinary Kanji characters), and metric glue/kerns are
inserted as a
substitute.
On the other hand, in Japanese PS fonts, all punctuations
and quotation
marks have the same character widths as ordinary Kanji
characters. For this
reason, when dvips processes the resulting DVI, these
characters have to be
shifted to the left by the amount of glue/kerns inserted.
To achieve this, Virtual fonts (VF) and PS TFM files are
required; When VF
contains the commands of shifting characters, PS font TFM
can have the
exact character widths of PS fonts.
The program makejvf can be used for this purpose. It
inputs a pTeX JFM file
(referred to as <TeX TFM file> in
SYNOPSIS above), and outputs a
corresponding VF file (with the same basename as <TeX
TFM file>) and a JFM
file for a PS font JFM file (<PS font TFM>
above).
OPTIONS
|
-C |
Condensed ("Cho-tai") mode. |
-K <PS-TFM>
Map Kana (more exactly, non-Kanji) characters to another PS font JFM named <PS-TFM>.
-b <integer>
Base line shift amount; the integer represents a relative value, using the character height as a base of 1000. When a positive integer is specified, the characters are lowered. When a negative integer is specified, the characters are raised.
|
-m |
Replace single/double quotation marks (’, ’’) with single/double prime quotation marks (so-called "minute") in vertical writing. The replacement is realized by manipulating glyphs of prime and double prime (JIS 0x216C and 0x216D; Unicode U+2032 and U+2033), not by putting actual glyphs designed for quotation marks (Unicode U+301D and U+301E/U+301F). |
-a <AFMfile>
Name of the input AFM file used for Kana-tsume mode. This option is unsupported.
-k <integer>
Kana-tsume (narrower spaces between Kana characters) margin amount; the integer represents a relative value, using the character width as a base of 1000. This option should be accompanied with -a option. This option is unsupported.
|
-i |
Start mapped font ID from No. 0 in output VF (by default, makejvf defaults to No. 1). | ||
|
-e |
Enhanced mode; the horizontal shift amount is determined from the glue/kern table of input JFM file. |
By default, makejvf uses
the hard-coded value as the horizontal shift
amount, which is (mostly) optimized for Japanese fonts. When
enhanced mode
(option -e) is enabled, the shift amount is
determined from the input pTeX
TFM (JFM) file, which is likely to output most suitable VF
for the JFM.
For most standard Japanese JFM (like jis.tfm and its
derivatives), the
output VFs from both modes will have no significant
difference. For
simplified/traditional Chinese JFM (like upschrm-h.tfm and
uptchrm-h.tfm),
the output VF from enhanced mode will be better. For
min10.tfm and its
derivatives, enhanced mode should never be enabled,
since the
characterization in min10.tfm is non-standard.
-t <CNFfile>
Use <CNFfile> as a configuration file.
|
-O |
Omit entries in VF for characters with default metric. This option is not allowed to be used with the option -t. |
-u <Charset>
UCS mode. Available charsets are: gb (GB = Simplified Chinese), cns (CNS = Traditional Chinese), ks (KS = Korean), jis (JIS = Japanese), jisq (JIS quote only), custom (user-defined CHARSET from <CNFfile>; see CONFIGURATION FILE FORMAT section).
Options below are effective only
in UCS mode:
-J <PS-TFM>
Map single/double quote to another JIS-encoded PSfont TFM.
-U <PS-TFM>
Map single/double quote to another UCS-encoded PSfont TFM.
|
-3 |
Use set3, that is, enable non-BMP characters support (with UCS mode). By default makejvf does not output >=U+10000, to reduce file size and to avoid problems with old DVI drivers. Recent versions of dvipdfmx and others can handle VF with >=U+10000 (= set3 in DVI language), therefore -3 might be helpful. | ||
|
-H |
Use half-width Katakana. |
EXAMPLE
If you want to use min10 as Ryumin-Light-H, run
makejvf min10.tfm rml
This generates min10.vf and
rml.tfm. Put these files in an appropriate
directory under TEXMF tree, and add the following line to
psfonts.map.
rml Ryumin-Light-H
CONFIGURATION FILE FORMAT
With -t
option, you can give makejvf a custom settings for
generating VF.
The syntax is:
% comment line
|
<code> |
<right> |
<down> REPLACE | |||||
|
<code> |
<new code> | ||||||
|
<code>,<code>,<code>..<code>,<code>,
|
|||||||
|
<code>,<code>..<code> |
Each line should begin with a
command, and should be TAB-separated. Line
starting with % is a comment, and empty lines are ignored.
The MOVE command specifies horizontal/vertical shift
amount for the
individual character <code>. The REPLACE
command replaces the character
<code> with <new code>. The
CHARSET command sets the custom character set
of output VF; the + character continues from the previous
line.
An example usage can be found in uptex-fonts project. See
GitHub repository
<https://github.com/texjporg/uptex-fonts>.
SEE ALSO
More detailed
description of makejvf in Japanese is available at
$TEXMFDIST/doc/fonts/ptex-fonts/README_makejvf
AUTHOR
This manual page
was written by Japanese TeX Development Community
<https://texjp.org>. For more information, see GitHub
repository <https://github.com/texjporg/ptex-fonts>.
Many thanks to Atsuhito KOHDA <kohda@debian.org>, for
providing another
manpage in Debian GNU/Linux system.