Almost all the symbols available on our fonts can be generated by
ordinary LATEX commands. However, there are type sizes not
obtainable by LATEX's size-changing commands with the ordinary
document styles. Consult a local TEX expert to find the
TEX name for such a font.
Tables
and
allow you
to determine if the font for a type style at a particular
size is preloaded, loaded on demand, or unavailable.
Table:
Type sizes for LATEX size-changing commands.
size |
default (10pt) |
11pt option |
12pt option |
\tiny |
5pt |
6pt |
6pt |
\scriptsize |
7pt |
8pt |
8pt |
\footnotesize |
8pt |
9pt |
10pt |
\small |
9pt |
10pt |
11pt |
\normalsize |
10pt |
11pt |
12pt |
\large |
12pt |
12pt |
14pt |
\Large |
14pt |
14pt |
17pt |
\LARGE |
17pt |
17pt |
20pt |
\huge |
20pt |
20pt |
25pt |
\Huge |
25pt |
25pt |
25pt |
|
Table:
Font classes: P = preloaded, D = loaded on demand,
X = unavailable.
|
\it |
\bf |
\sl |
\sf |
\sc |
\tt |
5pt |
D |
D |
X |
X |
X |
X |
6pt |
X |
D |
X |
X |
X |
X |
7pt |
P |
D |
X |
X |
X |
X |
8pt |
P |
D |
D |
D |
D |
D |
9pt |
P |
P |
D |
D |
D |
P |
10pt |
P |
P |
P |
P |
D |
P |
11pt |
P |
P |
P |
P |
D |
P |
12pt |
P |
P |
P |
P |
D |
P |
14pt |
D |
P |
D |
D |
D |
D |
17pt |
D |
P |
D |
D |
D |
D |
20pt |
D |
D |
D |
D |
D |
D |
25pt |
X |
D |
X |
X |
X |
X |
|
Table
tells you what size of type is used for each
LATEX type-size command in the various document-style options. For
example, with the 12pt option, the \large
declaration causes LATEX to use 14pt type. Table
tells, for every type size, to which class of fonts each type style
belongs. For example, in 14pt type, \bf
uses a preloaded
font and the other five type-style commands use load-on-demand fonts.
Roman (\rm
) and math italic (\mit
) fonts are all
preloaded; the \em
declaration uses either italic
(\it
) or roman.