[OS X TeX] MacOSX-TeX Digest, Vol 50, Issue 14
Claus Gerhardt
claus.gerhardt at uni-heidelberg.de
Sat Dec 17 17:40:21 EST 2011
pdffonts only shows embedded fonts. Acrobat indicates that only a subset is embedded. I think this is TeX's default behaviour.
This version of pdffonts apparently offers a slightly different output than the Linux version.
Claus
On Dec 17, 2011, at 21:56, Murray Eisenberg wrote:
> OK, I found the PDFFonts binary and moved it to ~/Library/TeXShop/bin. Thanks for that help.
>
> It still took some stumbling about after that to get the macro to run from TeXShop. The TeXShop doc page "Macros Help > Preliminaries" says:
>
> "To add macros created by others to your list of macros, open the
> Macro Editor and choose "Add macros from file..."...
>
> But in the TeXShop Macro Editor, I saw no such item "Add macros from file...". Is that for an older version of TeXShop (or the newest, Lion-only version)? In version , which I'm using under Snow Leopard, I finally figured out to use the "New Item" button. Then, rather than being able just to cite the Applescript file to use, I had to open the script in the Applescript editor (I presume any text editor would do, too) and then copy the script and paste it into the TeXShop Macro Editor's "Content" field, then Save it.
>
> Now -- after restarting TeXShop -- I can get get the macro to run for the file currently in TeXShop. But I don't see any information about embedding of fonts -- just a list of fonts used.
>
> Or is there some setting in TeXShop to specify that fonts should be embedded (and whether to use subset embedding)?
>
> P.S. In the old Y&Y TeX previewer DViWindo, it was possible to get a list of fonts in the viewed file and to have each font given a particular color throughout the document. Is such a thing possible with TeXShop/MacTeX?
>
>
> On 12/17/11 3:00 PM, macosx-tex-request at email.esm.psu.edu wrote:
>> From: Claus Gerhardt<claus.gerhardt at uni-heidelberg.de>
>> Subject: Re: [OS X TeX] pdffonts (MacOSX-TeX Digest, Vol 50, Issue
>> 13): OT
>> To: TeX on Mac OS X Mailing List<macosx-tex at email.esm.psu.edu>
>> Message-ID:<067BDE3C-00B7-40FB-8297-B5D3B77BE60E at uni-heidelberg.de>
>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="windows-1252"
>>
>> The binary is in the build folder inside the project folder. You will have to copy it manually to a bin folder in your path. I recommend ~/Library/TeXShop/bin then the attached Applescript, which should be run a macro, can find it.
>>
>> I also attached the binary for 10.6 or better.
>>
>> Claus
>> -------------- next part --------------
>> A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
>> Name: pdffonts.scpt.zip
>> Type: application/zip
>> Size: 6525 bytes
>> Desc: not available
>> Url :http://email.esm.psu.edu/pipermail/macosx-tex/attachments/20111217/54bac1e7/pdffonts.scpt-0001.zip
>> -------------- next part --------------
>> A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
>> Name: PDFFonts.zip
>> Type: application/zip
>> Size: 12112 bytes
>> Desc: not available
>> Url :http://email.esm.psu.edu/pipermail/macosx-tex/attachments/20111217/54bac1e7/PDFFonts-0001.zip
>> -------------- next part --------------
>>
>>
>> On Dec 16, 2011, at 23:27, Murray Eisenberg wrote:
>>
>>> > How does one go about building pdffonts from its source at
>>> > https://github.com/phst/PDFFonts
>>> > using Xcode?
>>> >
>>> > I downloaded the directory of source files and opened PDFFonts.xcodeproj in Xcode, then executed the build command there. But I still don't find the allegedly resulting binary, which the project files says is in target directory /usr/local/bin.
>>> >
>>> > (I'd rather install just this specific utility than a whole additional pdf renderer such as Poppler.
>>> >
>>> > On 12/16/11 3:00 PM,macosx-tex-request at email.esm.psu.edu wrote:
>>> > On Friday 16 December 2011, Nicola wrote:
>>>> >> Subject: [OS X TeX] Re: embedding fonts
>>>> >> To:MacOSX-TeX at email.esm.psu.edu
>>>> >>
>>>> >> In article<6CCD4427-9865-4A11-8EF4-D1148B4FE902 at tcd.ie>,
>>>> >> Bridget Kane<kaneb at tcd.ie> wrote:
>>>> >>
>>>>> >>> How do I know if my fonts are properly embedded?
>>>> >>
>>>> >> One way, already pointed out, is to use Adobe Reader. Another possibility is the
>>>> >> command-line tool pdffonts:
>>>> >>
>>>> >> pdffonts mydocument.pdf
>>>> >>
>>> > ....
>
>
> --
> Murray Eisenberg murray at math.umass.edu
> Mathematics & Statistics Dept.
> Lederle Graduate Research Tower phone 413 549-1020 (H)
> University of Massachusetts 413 545-2859 (W)
> 710 North Pleasant Street fax 413 545-1801
> Amherst, MA 01003-9305
> ----------- Please Consult the Following Before Posting -----------
> TeX FAQ: http://www.tex.ac.uk/faq
> List Reminders and Etiquette: http://email.esm.psu.edu/mac-tex/
> List Archive: http://tug.org/pipermail/macostex-archives/
> TeX on Mac OS X Website: http://mactex-wiki.tug.org/
> List Info: http://email.esm.psu.edu/mailman/listinfo/macosx-tex
>
>
More information about the MacOSX-TeX
mailing list