\def\PS{\textsc{PostScript}} \title{Malcolm\rq{}s Gleanings} \author[Malcolm Clark]{Malcolm Clark\\\texttt{m.clark@warwick.ac.uk}} \begin{Article} \newcommand{\TL}{{\em \TeX\kern-0.1emline}} \subsection{Rest in peace} For a number of years, the \lq{}maverick\rq{} (so described by Adrian \lq{}no relation\rq{} Clark) occasional publication \TL\ made its infrequent appearance. The last issue, number 14, came out in February 1992. As the erstwhile editor I now reluctantly admit that it has ceased publication. I had hoped that it might survive to a ripe old age (like issue 20), but a variety of reasons compel me to abandon it. \TL\ was always a free publication, so at least I don\rq{}t feel that there is a vast subscription paying audience out there which will feel aggrieved at not receiving the next edition. After all, part of the deal was supposed to be that if you wrote for it you were then on the subscription list. To the list of contributors, sorry, your subscriptions have lapsed. To the rest of you, well, you know you get what you pay for. There are now plenty of other ways to disseminate information about \TeX\ and family. Estimable publications like \BV, \emph{Lettres GUTenberg} (no, not \emph{Lettres fran\c cais}), TTN and the Dutch group\rq{}s MAPS more than adequately fill any holes that might have been left by \TL, and have the great virtue of being related to various groups. I hope that this encourages people to belong to those groups. Of course there are other ways to spread the word. The electronic distribution of information is an obvious alternative. Why, for example, don\rq{}t we have all these journals and newsletters (or annals) up on WWW (World Wide Web)? TTN is already available in electronic form, but I think I can see the day when it is available in (say) \PS\ form so that I can just call it up on the screen in front of me. The problem here lies in one of the recurrent problems of material available on the Internet -- who would bother subscribing to TUG or the UK group if one of the key benefits of membership, the publications, was already available electronically? I still prefer bits of paper (I can easily take them home, read them in the bath, make notes on them -- and the batteries rarely run flat), but paper may be a luxury we can\rq{}t really afford. I\rq{}m moderately hopeful that gadgets like the Sony DiscMan, together with emerging technologies like Adobe\rq{}s Acrobat may make portable electronic books a realistic alternative. \subsection{Carousel?} A couple of years ago, Adobe Systems started to introduce their \lq{}Multiple Masters\rq{} technology. At the time it was not wholly clear what their agenda really was. Multiple Masters allow you to retain the \lq{}look and feel\rq{} of a printed (or screen) document when you do not have access to the \lq{}correct\rq{} fonts. Imagine you had been sent \BV\ electronically, but without the embedded Baskerville fonts which are part of its corporate identity. Exactly what would happen when you tried to view it or print it depends on lots of things: at the worst you might not be able to view it at all; alternatively you might have some substitution which retained character widths, or character positions. The effect is that you would end up with something which was frankly unpleasant. The content would still be the \BV\ you have come to love, but its appearance would be well below the standard which we have come to expect. Adobe\rq{}s solution was to develop a scheme where two font families were introduced which would attempt to emulate the characteristics of the \lq{}missing\rq{} font(s). All this means is that they would have the same character widths and heights (slants, weights or whatever) so that the colour of the \lq{}page\rq{} would be similar. Of course, there was no intention that this would be an exact reproduction -- just that it would preserve characteristics like line breaks and the other physical attributes of the page. The two base fonts introduced were Minion and Myriad (now renamed Adobe Sans and Adobe Serif, I think). These were placed in the public domain. Originally Adobe\rq{}s marketing people (probably to put us off the true scent) were suggesting that this was the start of a wide range of Multiple Master fonts. In passing, this is where Yannis Haralambous in the last edition of \BV\ was misled. He states that -- \lq{}These (MM) are extremely complex and memory consuming, but still much poorer than \MF\ created fonts\rq{}: this may be true, but it is totally irrelevant and misses the point entirely; this is not what was going on at all. It was all a prelude to Acrobat, or, as it was originally code-named, Carousel. Multiple Masters were simply an enabling technology which had to be in place before Acrobat could be released. I had originally supposed that part of the reason behind MM was font licensing. The copyright of fonts depends on the country in which you sit. See, for example, Chuck Bigelow\rq{}s article in \TUB\ (\lq{}Notes on typeface protection\rq{}, vol.7(3), 1986). It is by no means certain that you have the right to transmit the details of any arbitrary font electronically: by doing so you may be in breach of copyright (there is no use pleading that Bodoni has been dead for more than 50 years, or Baskerville for that matter -- they never held the copyright anyway). Another reason not to do this is that encoding or embedding the fonts takes up an enormous amount of space. If you are transmitting a book sized document, the extra for fonts is no big issue: if you are transmitting something relatively short, it could be the biggest item. There are therefore legal and practical reasons for this route. Once we have an Acrobat document, it can be transmitted electronically without difficulty, and can be read by anyone with an Acrobat reader. Such readers seem destined to be made available with every machine, virtually as part of the operating system. It no longer matters what software was used to prepare the original -- you will still be able to see what the author intended, without having that software yourself. There are other little advantages: the one I like most is the post-it notes that you can attach to the document. For example, this could mean that as an author I send my Acrobat document (which of course started life as \TeX\ or \LaTeX) to my publisher, whose editors would annotate via the post-it notes. I then revise the returned document. It all starts to sound very plausible. And yes, it does work. Another pleasing feature is the ability to search the Acrobat documents. This works reasonably well, although, as you might expect, ligatures (and I dare say, diacriticals) don\rq{}t yet work properly. Of course, years and years ago you could search a dvi file for text strings with ArborText\rq{}s previewer, with just the same sorts of restrictions. I think it is always good when the innovations introduced through \TeX\ and its associated products becomes incorporated into mainstream technologies like this. It shows how \TeX\ leads the way. \subsection{Knuth, the video} Donald Knuth is now available on video: University Video Communications, based at Stanford, now have a tape of Knuth\rq{}s \lq{}Computer musings\rq{} in which he discusses the One-Way Associative Law. Sounds just the thing for a stocking filler next Christmas. \subsection{Sheep stealing in Barnet} From time to time a chestnut re-appears. A half remembered quotation from Frederic Goudy is trotted out: \lq{}\lq{}anyone who would letterspace lower case would steal sheep\rq{}\rq{}. There are many who concur with the spirit of this statement, but unfortunately it isn\rq{}t what Fred said. Matters have been confused recently by the publication of a book by Erik Spiekermann \& E M Ginger entitled \lq{}Stop Stealing Sheep\rq{}, which does contain the erroneous quotation. Fortunately they also print the correct version. What Goudy actually said was \lq{}\lq{}anyone who would letterspace black letter would steal sheep\rq{}\rq{}. Where does that leave us? In \BV\ 3(2) I noted that Eric Gill suggests letterspacing lower case as a substitute for italics. While I know of no rumours that Gill actually {\em stole\/} sheep, that might have been the least of their worries. \subsection{Public domain does not mean user unfriendly} In another surprising outburst (one by-product of the remarkable mud-wrestling competition held with Berthold Horn, judged by most observers to result in a draw), Yannis Haralambous suggests in a footnote that \lq{}public domain software is never as user-friendly as commercial\rq{}: I beg to differ. I have the doubtful pleasure of a Windows machine on my desk. One of its few really excellent pieces of software is Pegasus, a Windows-based electronic mailer. It is simple, straightforward, and almost a pleasure to use. A true pleasure to use is Eudora, another mailer, on the Macintosh. Both of these are public domain, and I challenge anyone to carp significantly about their user interface. In fact, I\rq{}m rather surprised by Yannis\rq{} assertion that \lq{}important innovations (in \TeX\ etc) have always appeared first in public domain software\rq{}: I have only to think back to the release of \TeX\ on the pc: this was not in the public domain but was the result of significant and independent work by Lance Carnes and David Fuchs -- maybe it was not an important innovation, but to me, freeing \TeX\ from the restrictions of academic mainframe computers and releasing it to the personal computer level seems a quantum leap forward. Even Yannis\rq{} beloved virtual fonts were released first by ArborText, many years before they became commonplace. There are countless other examples around -- think of Blue Sky\rq{}s innovative Lightning Textures, or Michael Vulis\rq{} V\TeX. This continued denigration of the importance which commercial vendors have had in the adoption and spread of \TeX\ smacks of a re-writing of easily verifiable history. They were there: they supported us all for many years until public domain versions of the program finally became robust and reliable. I believe they still have a place in the development of \TeX\ and \TeX\ tools. I just hope they don\rq{}t get so frustrated by the lack of understanding and respect they receive that they abandon the game entirely. \subsection{Hints \& Tips} At the first meeting that this group held at RHBNC one of the \lq{}events\rq{} was a \LaTeX\ tables workshop. One of the problems that always comes up with tables is the incredible contortions that you have to go through to make the floating tables appear just where it is that you want. It would be naive to assume that this is going to be one of the problems that will disappear with \LaTeX3. In the first place it is extremely difficult to come up with a sensible and coherent set of rules which describe the variety of conditions and exceptions to figure and table placement; in the second place, the \LaTeX\ defaults are perhaps not the best chosen. At least we can do something about that, although there are rather too many parameters to be able to come up with a definitive optimal set of values. However, at the RHBNC meeting, Geeti Granger of John Wiley \& Sons provided a set of values which she suggests had been used with more success at John Wiley than the defaults. She suggested the values in the following table: \begin{tabular}{lrr} parameter & default & suggested \\ \hline topnumber & 2 & 2 \\ bottomnumber & 1 & 2 \\ totalnumber & 3 & 4 or 2 \\ dbltopnumber & 2 & 2 \\ \verb|\topfraction| & 0.7 & 0.9 \\ \verb|\bottomfraction| & 0.3 & 0.5 \\ \verb|\textfraction| & 0.2 & 0.1 \\ \verb|\floatpagefraction| & 0.5 & 0.8 \\ \verb|\dbltopfraction| & 0.7 & 0.9 \\ \verb|\dblfloatpagefraction| & 0.5 & 0.8 \end{tabular} \end{Article} \endinput