Adobe FRAMEMAKER 10 User Manual page 74

Hide thumbs Also See for FRAMEMAKER 10:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

When the MIF interpreter reads a
reads another
statement or reads the end of the
Font
previous state by providing an empty
ments inherits the current font state for those properties not supplied.
For more information about creating and applying character formats in a MIF file, see
character formats" on page
Usage of some aspects of the
Locked fonts and text insets
The
statement does not correspond to any setting in the Character Designer. The statement is used for text
FLocked
insets that retain formatting information from the source document.
If the
statement appears in a specific character format, that character format is part of a text inset
<FLocked Yes>
that retains formatting information from the source document. The character format is not affected by global
formatting performed on the document.
If the
statement appears in a specific character format, either that character format is not part of a
<FLocked No>
text inset, or that character format is part of a text inset that reads formatting information from the current
document. The character format is affected by global formatting performed on the document.
For more information about text insets, see
Font name
When a
or
PgfFont
Font
identifies the font in one or more of the following ways:
The statement
FPlatformName
The statements
FFamily
nally.
The statement
FPostScriptName
ically, the name that would be passed to the PostScript
The PostScript name is unique for all PostScript fonts, but may not be available for fonts that have no PostScript
version.
For complete font specifications, FrameMaker always writes the
statements. In addition, the Windows version of FrameMaker also writes the
ScriptName
statement. A UNIX version of FrameMaker ignores
When FrameMaker reads a MIF file that includes more than one way of identifying a font, it checks the font name
in the following order:
Platform name
1
Combination of family, angle, weight, and variation properties
2
3
PostScript name
If you are writing filters to generate MIF, you do not need to use all three methods. You should always specify the
PostScript name, if it is available. You should use the platform name only if your filter will be run on a specific
platform. A filter running on a specific platform can easily find and write out the platform name, but the name
cannot be used on other platforms.
Font encoding
The
statement specifies which encoding to use for a font. The default is Roman, or standard 7-bit
<FEncoding>
encoding. If this statement is not included for a font, 7-bit encoding is assumed.
statement, it continues using the character format properties until it either
Font
statement. A
FTag
23. For more information about character formats in general, see your user's manual.
and
statements is described in the following sections.
PgfFont
Font
"Text insets (text imported by reference)" on page
statement includes all of the family, angle, weight, and variation properties, FrameMaker
specifies a font name that uniquely identifies the font on a specific platform.
,
,
, and
FAngle
FWeight
specifies the name given to a font when it is sent to a PostScript printer (specif-
statement. You can set the character format back to its
Para
statement that does not supply all property substate-
Font
specify how FrameMaker stores font information inter-
FVar
operator before any font coordination operations).
FindFont
,
FFamily
FAngle
.
FPlatformName
ADOBE FRAMEMAKER 10
MIF Reference
"Creating and applying
130.
,
,
, and
FWeight
FVar
FPost-
FPlatformName
69

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents