\centerline{\MFb\bf\ meets at Oxford} \noindent ``Do you wish to succeed with \MF\ or even just get it to work?'' ran the message from Charles Curran in \TeX hax. I was intrigued, and joined him, and a small band of other would-be \MF-ers at Oxford University on March 20th. Part of the appeal of this meeting was the presence of Richard Southall, well-known in the \TeX\ world for his work with \MF. The bulk of the morning was given over to a talk by Richard on his approach to font design using \MF. Richard had used mainly the `old' \MF\ (described in {\sl`\TeX\ and} \MF), rather than the more recent \MF\ ({\sl`The \MF\ book}). Nevertheless he was clearly far more competent in the use of either than the combined might of the others present. Richard described the old \MF\ as using a pen metaphor, while the new one adopts an outline fill approach. Nevertheless, his comments as a someone trying to design `technically satisfactory typefaces' were applicable to both. He noted that there were few, if any, good books on the aesthetics of type, and that type design is essentially a craft which utilises unarticulated rules (in other words, its not easy, and it's difficult to say why some designs are good and some aren't). There has been a tradition of type design since the 1500's, and certain internal standards have evolved which have formed opinion of what type ought to look like: insofar as objectively defined criteria of goodness of design could be established, Richard suggested the following: letters should look the same weight, size and alignment, and should appear evenly spaced. Even these apparently straightforward criteria are hard to achieve over a single type face, let alone a family. \MF\ was viewed by Richard as a draughting, rather than an original design tool, and when he used it he tended also to use alternative approaches. He began at the large scale, and then honed down the details. One very relevant point was the impossibility to achieve device independence --- most acutely at low resolutions. The different `write white'/`write black' characteristics of the Xerox and Canon laser printers mean that the \MF\ description should take these factors into account. Similarly, Richard queried the {\sl meta} nature of \MF, citing an example where a description worked successfully over several ranges and styles, but unexpectedly developed a wierd protuberance at one particular set of parameters (within the previous parameter extremes). There was no {\it a priori} way of demonstrating that this would occur. In other words there appears to be no correctness or consistency proof for a \MF\ description. What \MF\ can do well (despite this last counter-example), is to allow gradation of sizes, and to digitise an outline. What it does not do (and he included Ikarus here too), was to allow a designer to work directly on the appearance of the product. It must be stressed that Richard has worked particularly on low resolution fonts, especially those for vdu-type screens, and subtitling for films. He felt that by the time you get to 1200 dpi, then shape and appearance become synonymous. Given Knuth's oft-repeated recommendation that \TeX\ people talk to designers, it was clearly of the utmost importance to have this sort of discussion led by someone of Richard's knowledge and experience, especially someone who was aware of the deficiencies of \MF, as well as its good points. There are many pitfalls present in font design, and it would be wise to avoid them as far as possible. The simple solution appears to be to become apprenticed to a recognised type designer for a decade or so, and then use \MF\ (or some other automated system). Otherwise you will be in trouble. That's not to say that \MF\ is not useful to the lay user here and now. It is useful in order to produce pixel files from existing descriptions, perhaps at other resolutions, or for other point sizes. It will also be useful to generate the other characters which are currently unavailable. If you are willing to sacrifice the {\sl meta} nature of \MF, the problems are less acute. Sadly, we cannot afford to wait until a competent designer picks up the financially rather unprofitable exotic fonts like Sanskrit, hieroglyphic, even IPA, to name a few (although I'm not sure whether you could ever know whether a font like, say, Runic, was well designed). These are fonts which are most likely to be developed by enthusiastic amateurs. In the afternoon we managed an almost hands on session with pc\MF, thanks to \DW\ and the pc hardware might of Oxford University. This reasured everyone that it was possible to create characters (Dominik is working on a Sanskrit font), and gave us some feeling for the response time of the process. A font will not be designed in a day. Further \MF\ meetings like this one will be held, although details are not fixed at present. Contact: {\obeylines\parindent2em Charles Curran Oxford University Computing Service 13 Banbury Road OX2 6NN 0865 273269 Janet:|charles@oxford.vax2| UUCP:|ukc!ox-prg!charles| } \rightline{\sl Malcolm W Clark} \vfil \eject \centerline{\bf Macros on disk} \noindent I can distribute two sets of macros on disk at present; on 5{\frac1/4} inch disks for MS-DOS, and 3{\frac1/2} inch diskettes for the Macintosh. The macros available are: |manmac.tex| which are those listed on pages 413--425 of {\sl The \TeX book}, and include some double columning and verbatim facilities: and |table.tex|, together with its documentation file |tabman.tex|, which are Ray Cowan's table macros. It also includes a file of hyphenation exceptions, |hyphen.tex|, as published from time to time in TUGboat. This particular file will be updated as new exceptions to \TeX's algorithm come to light. A disk containing these macros can be obtained from me for the price of the medium, post \&\ packing, and a small copying charge. For the 5{\frac1/4} disks the charge is \quid2.00, and for the smaller diskettes \quid2.50. Note that no charge is made for the macros themselves. I hope that other macros may become available later. \rightline{\sl Malcolm W Clark} \vfil \bigskip \centerline{\bf Other \TeX ing} \noindent As \TeX\ becomes more and more widespread, material published through it becomes more and more widespread, to the extent that nobody bothers to mention the fact that it was \TeX ed. I do think it is a pity that \TeX\ is not acknowledged as the workhorse, but I suppose the fact that it is taken for granted is encouraging. It can be useful to show people who are interested in using \TeX\ the sorts of output that are available. If you can show them material that others have done, they may be able to gain a broader view of its capabilities. From time to time I do note publications that are \TeX ed. Among them are the following periodicals: ST-ECF Newsletter (ST-ECF is the Space Telescope --- European Coordinating Facility); the Newsletter of the International Association for Pattern Recognition, (whose use of amr gave them away --- especially that little blip on the `y', so characteristic of Almost Modern Roman); and lastly the journal `Supercomputer', published by SARA (Amsterdam Universities Computing Centre). There must be more: where are they? \rightline{\sl Malcolm W Clark}