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ClearTF3.ZIP "ClearFonts" Topaz, PCfont and VTss Replacements
Much as I love the Amiga for its graphic capabilities, its default
screen fonts, at least those of the A500, A1000 and A2000, leave much to
be desired. I for one have had quite enough of Topaz and "PCfont" (I have
a Bridgeboard), both of which are shameless ports of the 8x8 font that's
hardcoded into the IBM Color Graphic Adapter (I have one of these too).
Aside from the clutter of serifs on a small-format typeface, Topaz and
PCfont are often hard to read due to their inconsistent character widths
and heights. And to me, they're just plain u-g-l-y.
Among numerous Topaz-replacements that have appeared, one of my
favorites has been the font known as Pearl. It's a sans serif 8x8 font
having nicely "rounded" characters, and it was a model (one of several)
I used in designing ClearFonts. If Pearl has any drawback, it's that it
comes in only one size and "flavor": 8x8-pixel Topaz-replacement. Being
an avid BBS-er, I need a font that includes the "IBM Graphic" characters
that PCfont has, without being a "CGA lookalike". To date, there are but
a few "ANSI-Amiga" fonts, of which PCfont was one of the first (it's also
known as "ibm.font"), followed by CleanIBM, an early sans serif font onto
which the IBM Graphic "highbit" characters were grafted, replacing the
foreign-language letters previously occupying the ASCII codes above 127.
Again, this font came in only the 8x8 size, one more shortcoming I've
sought to address in this release.
ClearFonts are not my first foray into the realm of font design, and
probably won't be my last. Previous efforts include Malkro, a Topaz-
replacement font that grew into nine different sizes, three of which
became FastFonts-compatible once I overcame a bug in the font editor I
was using, and NewBlue, a PCfont-replacement that eventually grew into
three sizes, all FastFonts-compatible. Both Malkro and NewBlue were
modeled after the typeface resulting from a program called GemFont (Mark
Riley, c. 1985), which performed an end-run replacement of the Amiga's ROM
font (topaz 8). Here again, the problem was that of one size and flavor,
where I needed IBM graphics, and wanted to replace the 9- and 11-pixel
sizes of Topaz. Along came CHeath's FastFonts (originally bundled with
TxEd), not a moment too soon. Not until Workbench 1.3 would Fed, the font
editor, create fonts that "FF" would recognize as fixedwidth-type, and not
reject out of hand as "proportional" due to Fed having incorrectly set a
flag in the font header file.
Where Malkro and NewBlue were attempts to improve readability in long
stretches of single-spaced text by having capital and tall lowercase
letters drawn one pixel shorter (within the same space) than their
Topaz/PCfont counterparts, ClearFonts take a different approach: Make the
character sizes the same as, or slightly wider than, the Topaz originals,
and make them fit their alloted spaces better, and of course, get rid of
those damned curlicues. And lowercase "i" and "l", not to mention numeral
"1", really don't need those big flat feet.
ClearFonts presently come in three flavors: ClearPaz, a Topaz-
replacement in sizes 8, 9 and 11 (the three that FastFonts can "install"),
ClearBlue, a PCfont-replacement for terminals and Bridgeboards, also in
the three "FastFonts sizes", and ClearVT, a replacement for "VTSS" (size
8 only) in JR-Comm's VT-102 Emulation mode. ClearPaz and ClearBlue work
quite well as "Workbench replacement" fonts, while ClearVT is really a
program-specific font having little usefulness outside of the JR-Comm
font menu. ClearPaz and ClearBlue both offer the Size 9 for programs
offering a "text-60" mode (including Preferences for the Workbench),
and Size 11 for readability on Hi-Res (interlace) screens.
A hint for using ClearBlue with a terminal program: Whether or not
the terminal offers a choice of fonts, it will usually display the 8x8
font Workbench is using, which is ordinarily the ROM-font Topaz. Given
that FastFonts can install a new font into the Workbench environment as
well as speed the rendering of text, you'll probably have a faster term-
inal screen by using FastFonts to replace Topaz, then calling "topaz"
in the terminal's font menu (if it offers such a choice) than you would
have by calling ClearBlue directly into the terminal. It is therefore
best, IMHO, to install ClearBlue in your boot disk's :fonts directory
and add this line to its :s/Startup-Sequence
FF -1 ClearBlue.font
(that's assuming you're using 1.3 Workbench, and have kept the name "FF"
for the FastFonts utility, which is in a 1.3 WB disk's :c directory)
For uses not including a terminal or the Bridgeboard, follow the same
procedure, but substitute ClearPaz for ClearBlue. ClearPaz is a bit more
"sympatico" in that it has the same foreign-language characters and special
symbols in the same code locations as Topaz. WordPerfect and DiskX will
gag on ClearBlue (not crash, but display garbage), but both will display
normally (WP will refresh faster) with ClearPaz as the Topaz-replacement
through FastFonts.
JR-Comm 1.01 comes with a collection of fonts optimized for each of
its half-dozen-or-so terminal emulation modes. Among these are its "VTxx"
fonts, all intended for use in the VT-102 mode. In the event you need the
VT-102 emulation (it's probably the best one to use with a mainframe host)
and would like to retain the "ClearFont look", you'll want to call ClearVT
in the Font menu (a string gadget under Options: General), and 8 for the
Size (sorry, that's all I've included here). This will provide normal-
size 80x25 text with all the special characters, including reversed-video,
peculiar to a "real VT-102". Do NOT use the FastFonts procedure to install
ClearVT... the terminal may look okay, but nothing else will!
The ClearFonts are packaged much the same way as my previous releases;
assuming you've dissolved this archive "correctly" so as to retain paths
ClearTF3.doc This long-winded blurb
ClearPaz.font header for Topaz-replacement
ClearBlue.font header for PCfont-replacement
ClearVT.font header for VTSS-replacement
ClearPaz/8 bitmap for ClearPaz 8 (normal text)
ClearPaz/9 bitmap for ClearPaz 9 (text-60)
ClearPaz/11 bitmap for ClearPaz 11 (HiRes-text)
ClearBlue/8 bitmap for ClearBlue 8 (normal text)
ClearBlue/9 bitmap for ClearBlue 9 (text-60)
ClearBlue/11 bitmap for ClearBlue 11 (HiRes-text)
ClearVT/8 bitmap for ClearVT 8 (only size here)
Installation of the ClearFonts can be done all at once with the command
Simple make Fonts: be your destination then select the UnZip gahget to
extract the selected files there.
As with all previous "GFonts", ClearFonts are Public Domain, free and
"clear" (I hope). Pass them around, use them, modify them... hardcode them
into your program if you wish. Please give credit where it's due.
See ya' on the wires... Glenn Eddy 22 February 1991