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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
-
-