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Date:      Sat, 06 Oct 2007 08:50:49 -0700
From:      Frank Jahnke <jahnke@sonatabio.com>
To:        Giorgos Keramidas <keramida@ceid.upatras.gr>
Cc:        michaelgrunewald@yahoo.fr, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Equations
Message-ID:  <1191685849.960.4.camel@pinot.fmjassoc.com>
In-Reply-To: <20071006092228.GA2185@kobe.laptop>
References:  <1191604254.2944.12.camel@pinot.fmjassoc.com> <86k5q1gs8t.fsf@Llea.celt.neu> <1191621784.2944.60.camel@pinot.fmjassoc.com> <20071006092228.GA2185@kobe.laptop>

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On Sat, 2007-10-06 at 12:22 +0300, Giorgos Keramidas wrote:

> 
> Since the first releases of TeX, there have been many interesting
> developments about font-handling in the TeX world, like the typeface
> definitions of ConTeXt, and the drop-in packages of LaTeX which allow
> one to use Palatino, Helvetica, and other classic fonts.
> 

I figured this was the case, and it makes a difference.  This is OT, but
do you have a link that describe what font families are available?  I
assume the Postscript base set is easy.  But how about the others?

Continuing the OT, it is also interesting that the desktop publishing
applications that I am aware of (an that is certainly incomplete) do not
handle equations very well either.  Scribus didn't the last time I
looked; Frame might but that is not really an option.




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