Discussion:
calculating kerning pairs
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Tavis Ormandy
2022-08-06 23:49:42 UTC
Permalink
Hello, I naively assumed that when I did setfont (foo) show that the
kerning pairs in the font tables would influence spacing.

I understand now that it does not. You're supposed to use kshow and
apply the character spacing yourself.

Fair enough, but then how do I get the "base" kerning for a character
pair from within postscript, or do you have to parse the afm files
manually?

I understand that I can specify any kerning I want and that's a good
thing, but wouldn't you usually want that to be a multiplier applied to
the font's "base" kerning pairs?

Tavis.
--
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ken
2022-08-08 07:00:43 UTC
Permalink
Post by Tavis Ormandy
Hello, I naively assumed that when I did setfont (foo) show that the
kerning pairs in the font tables would influence spacing.
PostScript type 1 fonts don't have kerning information in the font.
Post by Tavis Ormandy
I understand now that it does not. You're supposed to use kshow and
apply the character spacing yourself.
Fair enough, but then how do I get the "base" kerning for a character
pair from within postscript, or do you have to parse the afm files
manually?
You have to parse the AFM files (or kern tables in a TrueType font)
manually.
Post by Tavis Ormandy
I understand that I can specify any kerning I want and that's a good
thing, but wouldn't you usually want that to be a multiplier applied to
the font's "base" kerning pairs?
I can't pretend to know the reasoning behind the original design, but I
would suggest that kerning is regarded as being like all other spacing
control (widow/orphan/rivers etc) to be managed by the layout
application.

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