T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
4554.1 | | HPSCAD::GATULIS | Frank Gatulis 297-6770 | Thu Feb 28 1991 16:41 | 15 |
|
I'm not sure but it almost sounds as if the system is having trouble
finding ICONX. Do you have it in your :C directory? I'll look tonight
and see if I can come up with anything that might help.
The manual adendum specifically states that it DOES work with a 1.2
workbench (Page 27 of the addendum. I have it here). It's VERY slow
printing in NORMAL mode under WB 1.2 because of the print drivers.
Also, the current version is 2.00b (use the "ABOUT" menue entry to
see this). If you don't have the latest version, call em', there's
no charge but you'll have to send back disk #1 for a replacement.
Frank
|
4554.2 | | HPSCAD::GATULIS | Frank Gatulis 297-6770 | Thu Feb 28 1991 16:44 | 9 |
|
Re .0
Almost forgot. V2.00 requires 1 meg of memory according to the
addendum.
Frank
|
4554.3 | WorkBench 1.2 doesn't include IconX | CSC32::K_APPLEMAN | | Thu Feb 28 1991 16:59 | 17 |
| Hi Gregg!
Your problem IS WorkBench 1.2. IconX is a WorkBench 1.3 program. I
believe it will work on 1.2 so if you can find it somewhere, you
probably won't have any problem using it. If you can get hold of a
WorkBench 1.3 disk, it should be in your C directory. If you still
have your 500, you can run WorkBench 1.3 without having to upgrade the
ROMs. If your hard drive controller is an autoboot, I suggest
upgrading both the workbench and the ROMS so you have autoboot
capibility.
The program disk for Exellence should be 1.3 so the IconX should be in
it's C directory.
Later
Ken
|
4554.4 | trying to save $.29 | DELNI::MEYER | Dave Meyer | Thu Feb 28 1991 18:03 | 9 |
| Seems we have some Excellence! experts here. Good. I have a
question about the latest version that you might be able to field. The
flier they sent me says it has 100% color PostScript support and 4
types of printer output: NLQ, Draft, Graphic, and PostScript. Normally
"PostScript Support" means that the program can send a PostScript file
to a PostScript (laser) printer. Sometimes it means that the program
can cause a printer - even a not-to-bright dot-matrix - to deliver
PostScript response at various resolutions. I would like to know if
Excellence! is the former or the latter.
|
4554.5 | excellence! 2.0 and up needs 1 meg & WB 1.3 | CLOSUS::J_BUTLER | L'audace, toujour l'audace! | Thu Feb 28 1991 19:08 | 12 |
| After a recent problem with excellence! my daughter called the
technical support line. They told her that excellence! 2.0 and
higher requires both 1 meg AND Workbench 1.3.
We had the 1 meg, and once we got Wb 1.3 everything was OK.
I am afraid I can give no help or advice on excellence! with
PostScript or colors.
Regards!
John B.
|
4554.6 | ex | HPSCAD::GATULIS | Frank Gatulis 297-6770 | Fri Mar 01 1991 07:14 | 19 |
|
Re .3
I have to disagree with .3 on two points.
1. excellence! 2.00 does not ship with a workbench. There is no C:
directory and there is no ICONX shipped with the product (at least
with my copy).
2. I don't believe ICONX is tied to 1.3 in any way. As I recall, I was
using it long before 13 was available. Perhaps 1.3 is the first
thing from Comodore to use it. I don't know.
Back to .0 all those ICONS (except for HD-Install) DO require ICONX
in the C directory.
Frank
|
4554.7 | IconX did NOT ship with standard 1.2 | CSC32::K_APPLEMAN | | Fri Mar 01 1991 08:23 | 17 |
| re -.1
Well, I don't have Excellence so I had no way of knowing if it shipped
with a WorkBench disk or not, I was just assuming it did and if so, it
certainly would have been 1.3.
As far as IconX is concerned, unless I am mistaken, a virgin 1.2
WorkBench disk did not have it. I was quite sure that IconX was around
in 1.2 days but it's been a couple of years since I went to 1.3 so I
just wasn't sure anymore. Commodore included IconX on 1.3 C:
directory.
If the previous replies are correct and Exellence does not run on 1.2,
Greg, you are just going to have to break down and upgrade to 1.3 :^)
Ken
|
4554.8 | excellence! postscript | HPSCAD::GATULIS | Frank Gatulis 297-6770 | Fri Mar 01 1991 09:13 | 55 |
|
re .4 excellence! postscipt ...
Try answering this in a couple of parts -
I do postscript between excellence! and LPS40 all the time so I can
verify that. Those print types you talked about (NLQ, DRaft,
postscript, graphic) are cycled through via a gadget in a std print
requestor. For LPS40 use you simply select postscript mode and specify
a file (eg DH0:TMP/FOO.PS) as the destination. You simply upload it
and print it just as you would a VAXDocument postscript file.
Excellence! postscript output is true WYSIWYG (matches the screen
perfectly).
If you had a local postscript printer on the Amiga you'd simply send
the output of excellence! to the printer. I have no way to verify that
this works (don't know why it shouldn't). I guess there are 3
assumptions:
1. your printer can interpret postscript
2. the postscript fonts are either built in OR are downloaded via
some other process. Excellence! can't do it.
3. The fonts you use must be understood by your printer. Excellence!
is theoricically capable of supporting any postscript font. It
comes with Times, Helvetica, Courier, & Symbol whose use is
licenced by Commodore (so I'm told by MSS). There is also a
utility with excellence! v2.0 to convert the postscript metric
files from Professional Page to excellence! format. That sounds
good in principle but I believe LPS40's don't incorporate many
of them.
Excellence! V2.0 supports full color Postscript but I don't have access
to anything that can print it stuff so I've never actually seen
output. I did generate a color postscript file and looked at it's
contents with a text editor and it certainly looks like proper color
postscript syntax to me. Bring on those new color printers!
I've also tried sending a postscript file to my dot matrix (24 pin)
printer using Pixelscript and can say:
1. What a waste. Output was far from acceptable to me. At best, the
output was draft quality and you can achieve much faster by printing
in graphic mode.
2. Pixelscript took 20 minutes to render 1" printing (on a 68000)
and it goes just as slow on white space as printed area.
3. I don't know if Pixelscript has been fixed but it worked with
V1 of excellence! and not with V2. Apparently pixelscript has
intimate knowledge of how some applications deal with font scaling
and that was changed in V2.0 of excellence! (the prologue).
Hope this tells you what you were looking for. And yes, I am
opinionated. I love the compatability and ease of use in going
between excellence! and LPS40.
Frank
|
4554.9 | Xicon and IconX | URQUEL::A_ANDERSON | DTN 592-4170 NSU/VAX | Fri Mar 01 1991 12:46 | 8 |
| There was a PD program out during the later days of 1.2 called Xicon.
When 1.3 came out CA added a IconX. So every one is right.
Both Xicon and IconX did simular functions, in allowing you to launch
CLI only programs from the workbench.
|
4554.10 | | DELNI::MEYER | Dave Meyer | Fri Mar 01 1991 16:40 | 12 |
| re.8
Frank,
thanks. What you seem to be saying is either that it doesn't work
or isn't worth the effort. At least to a dot matrix printer. I don't
have a laser printer at home, can't afford to buy one nor have I the
space for it, so how well it works with that equipment is not important
to me. I could, indeed, ship it off to work and print it there, but
that would be an abuse - and a long distance call. I'll have to look
around for another option.
Dave
|
4554.11 | A bit off the subject. | CSC32::K_APPLEMAN | | Mon Mar 04 1991 08:27 | 11 |
| re .8, .10
This is a bit off the topic, but if you want excellent font quality on
a dot matrix printer (at least a dot matrix with high density)
Professional Page doe great when using the CompuGraphic fonts. I was
really amazed. This is the only program I've seen so far that does
decent font printing on D.M. printers. I have a 24-pin panasonic, so
don't know how it does on 9 pins.
Ken
|
4554.12 | The advantages of DTP and Outline Fonts | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ LTN1 | Mon Mar 04 1991 09:18 | 16 |
| Re .11:
> This is a bit off the topic, but if you want excellent font quality on
> a dot matrix printer (at least a dot matrix with high density)
> Professional Page doe great when using the CompuGraphic fonts. I was
> really amazed. This is the only program I've seen so far that does
> decent font printing on D.M. printers. I have a 24-pin panasonic, so
> don't know how it does on 9 pins.
While we're off the subject, PageStream 2.0/2.1 also produces excellent
output on dot-matrix printers using both CompuGraphic and PostScript
fonts. My Star SG-15 is supported at its maximum 240x208 (whereas the
Panasonic KX-P1124 can be supported at 360x360 -- higher density than
most laser printers). The trick is in the rendering of OUTLINE fonts;
rather than scaling and dithering a dot-matrix font, the actual edges
of each character are calculated so they come out smooth and sharp.
|
4554.13 | must check spot size also | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Mon Mar 04 1991 11:16 | 9 |
| re: .12
Don't be fooled, as I was, by that 360 by 360 specification. While it
is true that the pins can be positioned and fired on a 1/360th inch
grid, the size of each pin is 1/180th of an inch, so some of the
resolution is lost.
By contrast, a 300 dpi laser printer has a 1/300 inch spot size.
John Sauter
|
4554.14 | thanks | DELNI::MEYER | Dave Meyer | Mon Mar 04 1991 17:35 | 7 |
| Sounds like I'll need to buy a DTP package to print out my letters
to the kin-folk and other important documents.
re:.13
Actually, the pins aren't quite that big. Still, some resolution
would be lost. Just no where near as much as expected. Nice dark images
also photo-copy better than the light single-pass images.
|
4554.15 | Current opinions on excellence 2.0, features | TLE::ALIVE::ASHFORTH | Lord, make me an instrument of thy peace | Wed May 29 1991 12:54 | 18 |
| I've just received an offer from MSS to upgrade from my rather antique version
of Scribble! to excellence 2.0 for $69. On occasion I've contemplated upgrading
to a topflight document-processor, but I'm not sure if excellence is it or not.
What I'd really like to have is the full feature set of FrameMaker, if anyone is
familiar with that; if you're not, DECwrite is based on it and is pretty
similar. Biggies include index/TOC capability, headers/footers, inclusion of
graphics; built-in graphic editor (however simple) a plus. The idea would be
to be able to use this to produce professional-quality reports, feasibility
studies, design documents, and the like. I do have the tiny glossy sheet listing
excellence's features, but what they say isn't always what you see. F'rinstance,
can one import EPS files or just output PS? Can you flow text around graphics?
Can you have both "anchored" and "unanchored" graphic frames?
Thanks for your opinions.
Cheers,
Bob
|
4554.16 | Here's "some" information | HPSCAD::GATULIS | Frank Gatulis 297-6770 | Wed May 29 1991 14:53 | 45 |
|
Re -1
Bob,
I use excellence! 2.0 and while it's far superior to Scribble, It lacks
a number of features you're looking at. Essentially, the glossy sheet
they sent you is accurate. Here's some more input -
1. It does indeed do index and table of contents but you have to number
your own headings, it's not automatic. Along the same line, it does
not give you bulleted lists automatically but it has all the ruler
indent features that allow you to do it manually.
2. It does headers, footers & footnotes very nicely
3. You can include IFF graphics. The graphic can be resized. You
can't flow text around a graphic. Actually, the grapic is treated
as a giant character in some respects. By that, I mean it occupies
some space on a line. You can enter a line of text up-to-it from the
left and add text to the right of it. In practice I find it's much
like inserting figures in a runoff document. There is a 2nd problem
also. If I recall correctly, when you import the picture, the
colors in the picture get remapped to the current excellence!
pallette (or was it the other way around?). Either way it's another
thing you have to deal with.
4. You can't import EPS. In fact there's no way to include a structured
graphic of any type that I'm aware of.
5. You can't write EPS, only PS. PS output is a "very" accurate
WYSIWYG. There is also a page prieview mode (2 pages at a time)
which I use quite often.
6. If you output a PS document which includes IFF pictures, the
pictures become bitmapped PS images and the PS files get huge,
very rapidly.
7. The program has no graphic editing capabilities whatsoever.
8. I've never heard the terms "anchored", ans "unanchored" graphic
frames so I don't know what that means in excellence! terms.
Frank
|
4554.17 | Thanks (sigh) | TLE::ALIVE::ASHFORTH | Lord, make me an instrument of thy peace | Wed May 29 1991 17:46 | 15 |
| Thanks, Frank. You've confirmed some of my impressions. The ecstatic little
bullets like "100% PostScript-Compatible!" usually leave more unsaid than said,
and this case is no exception.
I'm afraid I got quite spoiled by FrameMaker (on the Sun under Unix, BTW). I
found it both powerful and intuitive, and quite rugged as well. DECwrite seems
to be a "value subtracted" version, though- it really lost something in the
translation.
I think for the moment I'll skip the upgrade. If I do decide to get a more
powerful product, I'll take a good look at the info on Professional Page and
PageStream, as the apparent frontrunners in the Amiga DTP field.
Cheers,
Bob
|
4554.18 | Excellence a big improvement on Scribble | CIMNET::KYZIVAT | Paul Kyzivat | Thu May 30 1991 19:58 | 12 |
| I also have Excellence, and the previous description seems accurate. I
absolutely HATED Scribble!, and find Excellence a great improvement in ease
of use as well as functionality. It isn't wonderful, but it is decent.
One problem I had not anticipated with it is output speed. I have never
been able to get the draft output modes (using the printer in text mode) to
work, so all output had to be in graphic mode. This is painfully slow on
an LA75, and doesn't look professional quality. I now have a PS printer
and the output is fine, although postscript is only supported in a
halfhearted way and is very poorly documented.
Paul
|
4554.19 | re -1 | HPSCAD::GATULIS | Frank Gatulis 297-6770 | Thu May 30 1991 21:30 | 29 |
|
re .-1
Paul,
That speed problem with draft mode must be an LA75 driver problem. It
almos sounds as if you're printing in "graphic" mode if its slow. When
I print in either DRAFT or NLQ mode it runs at printer speed. I guess
it doesn't matter now that you have a postscript printer.
My only postscript output has been to an LPS40 and I've been very
pleased with the results. I wish it could deal with EPS so we could
include structured drawings. I've asked them about this several times
but they don't seem interrested.
Are you aware that you can use the Adobe fonts on the C= extras disk
as well as the ones that come with the program? The advantage to the
Adobe fonts is that you can run excellence! at pitch-9 and see the whole
page (well, almost the whole page) on the screen at a time. The screen
font rendering is much finer/lighter this way but you don't have to deal
with the left/right scrolling as you're entering the text (using the
excellence! fonts and pitch-15).
Frank
|
4554.20 | Excellence & PostScript | CIMNET::KYZIVAT | Paul Kyzivat | Fri May 31 1991 09:17 | 28 |
| > That speed problem with draft mode must be an LA75 driver problem. It
> almos sounds as if you're printing in "graphic" mode if its slow. When
> I print in either DRAFT or NLQ mode it runs at printer speed.
If I run in draft mode it does print in text mode, but the output is
useless - every line starts at the left margin of the printer, regardless
of how it is supposed to be positioned. It is as if the raw text is being
sent to the printer without ANY formatting or positioning information. I
have a feeling that either I have a buggy version or have set some
excellence option wrong.
> Are you aware that you can use the Adobe fonts on the C= extras disk
> as well as the ones that come with the program? The advantage to the
> Adobe fonts is that you can run excellence! at pitch-9 and see the whole
> page (well, almost the whole page) on the screen at a time. The screen
> font rendering is much finer/lighter this way but you don't have to deal
> with the left/right scrolling as you're entering the text (using the
> excellence! fonts and pitch-15).
I have heard that something like this is possible, but have been able to
find no information on this. A customer at the Memory Location last
weekend was trying to show how to do this, but he didn't have all the
details either and screwed it up. In addition to changing the pitch to 9
and moving some fonts around, he set SCALE=72 in the Excellence tool icon.
I would appreciate more information on how this scale parameter, the pitch
setting, and the fonts interact.
|
4554.21 | | HPSCAD::GATULIS | Frank Gatulis 297-6770 | Fri May 31 1991 10:04 | 9 |
|
Re -1
I made some notes regarding the use of the Adobe fonts and the
excellence! settings. I'll take a look and enter something over
the weekend.
Frank
|
4554.22 | Questions | CARROL::MELLITZ | | Mon Jun 03 1991 15:21 | 11 |
| Does Excellence! do anywhere near as nice a job printing to a LJ250 as
ProPage?
My complaint with ProPage is that its slow with screen updates. How
fast is Excellence!? Can you get a head of it? How fast is screen
scrolling and cursor placement?
Execellence! really has no line art tools?
... Rich
|
4554.23 | | HPSCAD::GATULIS | Frank Gatulis 297-6770 | Mon Jun 03 1991 17:34 | 18 |
| Re -1
I can't compare excellence! to ProWrite graphics outout. Just never
seen it. In NLQ mode they should be identical.
Yes you can get ahead of excellence!. Screen behavior/speed is very
comparable between the latest versions of these products. The
programs typically get behind when editing. Inserting text at the
end of the buffer is rapid.
No! excellence! has no drawing tools and probably never will. According
to the technical support peopleas MSS they consider it simply a word
processor and are very resistant to features which which "they"
consider drawing or desktop publishing in nature.
Frank
|
4554.24 | Excellence demo anywhere? | TLE::ALIVE::ASHFORTH | Lord, make me an instrument of thy peace | Wed Jun 05 1991 10:35 | 8 |
| I'm considering excellence! versus an upgrade to a DTP package such as ProPage
or Pagestream. I've downloaded the PageStream demo, but I haven't yet found
either a ProPage or an excellence! demo. Does anyone have or know of one for
either of these programs?
Thanks in advance,
Bob
|
4554.25 | A decision, FWIW | TLE::ALIVE::ASHFORTH | Lord, make me an instrument of thy peace | Fri Jun 07 1991 11:36 | 37 |
| After perusing all the notes regarding PageStream, ProPage, and Excellence!,
reading the available literature on each, downloading the PageStream demo, and
speaking with Frank Gatulis offline....
I'm going for excellence! 2.0, for the following reasons:
(1) For structured documents such as reports, excellence! is actually better
than the DTP packages. Can't figure out why they don't include indicies and
TOC abilities.
(2) In the DTP packages, screen updates are excruciatingly slow; to be fair,
they have a lot of work to do, using outline fonts and calculating precise
page layout, but it's crippling for massive text entry. Perhaps an accelerator
board alleviates this to the point that it's tolerable, but I don't have one.
(3) To really use one of the DTP packages, you really *must* have a flicker-free
display if you want to keep your eyesight; I don't.
My basic take on the situation is that a desktop publishing package is *not* a
replacement for a good word processor, but an adjunct to one. Packages like
ProWrite and PenPal seem to be addressing the users who don't require "pro"
features in either text processing *or* DTP, but no Amiga package currently
available seems able to provide professional-level features in both. Excellence!
seems to have the best WP capability, IMHO, though a different perspective than
mine might give the nod to WordPerfect. It also has at least rudimentary
capabilities for including graphics, hich should be sufficient for me (I think).
If I find that I *do* require DTP capabilities, I expect I'll still use
excellence! as my WP program, and then "postprocess" the result with the DTP
package.
While I don't know if my requirements are shared by other noters, I figured this
info *might* be useful to others in roughly the same situation, thus this reply.
Cheers,
Bob
|
4554.26 | ex | VSSCAD::GATULIS | Frank Gatulis 226-6140 | Mon Sep 16 1991 13:14 | 29 |
|
Any WB 2.0 users out there that -
Run Excellence! 2.00x &
run with an overscanned screen &
can "successfully" print to prefernces in "graphic" mode ?
I've never been able print in graphics mode from excellecne! while
my screen is overscanned (normal size works fine). I have WB 1.3
Furthermore, my favorite support person (ha!) at MSS says:
- they have never tried overscan and don't have a capable monitor
- his guess is that it probably doesn't work
- they're not likely to fix because they believe C= doesn't bless
overscan ???? so they only support "std size".
I can't imagine C= doesn't see overscanned screens as being acceptable
under 2.0.
Last saturday I recieved the latest version of excellence! (2.00c)
which has some WB 2.0 bug fixes. It still has the overscanned print
problem under WB 1.3 and I wondered if there's some reason why it
"might" just work under WB 2.0.
Thanks,
Frank
|
4554.27 | Excellence @ postscript | CGOOA::LEMOINE | | Fri Oct 25 1991 14:33 | 16 |
| Reply to notes .19 & .20
Hi Frank , could you post the settings you have been using with
Excellence when creating Documents for eventual output to a Postscript
printer. You mentioned setting the Pitch to 9 instead of the 15 that
MSS recommends in theyre rather thin docs on Postscript also What Scale
value have you been using ?? Are you using the Pcourier, PHelvetica
fonts that were on disks ??
I have been previewing the PostScipt docs I have been creating with the
Public Domain Postscript interpreter called Post with Limited success
as POST seems to choke with a DictFull error on the files created with
Excellence .The files do Print okay when output to a LN03 Script
Printer. I have found Post to be useful when Previewing and printin
Postscript files from ADPRO and Pagestream 2.1.
Regards John Lemoine at @EMO Compuserve 75320,143
|
4554.28 | Adobe font scoop | VSSCAD::GATULIS | Frank Gatulis 226-6140 | Fri Oct 25 1991 15:47 | 77 |
|
John,
Let's take em' one at a time .....
Pitch-15 is correct if you're using the fonts that came with
excellence! (PTimes, PHelvetica, PCourier, PSymbol). Note that
there is a corresponding set of .METRIC files in your fonts
directory for each of those excellence! fonts.
I chose instead, to use the ADOBE fonts which are on the 1.3
extras disk. The adobe fonts look completely different. They are
very fine looking on the screen and depending on the monitor you use,
may look unacceptable to you. I run excellence! in interlace mode and
have a flicker fixer and multisync and I like the results. The
MAIN reason for wanting to use the adobe fonts is that I can see
the whole page on the screen without having to scroll horizontally.
This happens because the bitmapped versions of the adobe fonts are
require a pitch=9.
I'm happy with this set up but there are some drawbacks.
a) The excellence! fonts are available in even point sizes 10,12,etc which
seem sort of standard. The Adobe fonts only come in odd sizes
9,11,13. This really DOES make a difference. You would think that an
11 or 13 point font would surely be close enough to a 12 point to not
notice (it's only 1/72 of an inch!). Well, to my eye it is very
noticeable when I look at an entire page. It's a combination of not
only the font size, but the inter line spacing is different as well.
A good deal of this can be compensated with the line spacing gadget.
b) Another drawback is that you can't mix the excellence! and Adobe fonts
because SCALE and PITCH apply to the entire document but each font
set requires different pitch and scale settings.
c) The adobe fonts only consist of Times, Courier, Helvetica. There's no
Symbol font. All I use is Times, so it's ok with me.
Documentation in the manual is not to clear so here's how you can try
the adobe fonts for yourself and see if you like em'.
1. From the 1.3 extras disk copy the font directories and .FONT files
to your working font directory (for Times, Helvetica, Courier).
Don't forget to re-boot or do a fixfonts.
2. In the excellence! icon tooltype, you'll need to change/add
SCALE=72 (check the book for the number, I think it's 72 for Adobe).
3. In excellence! page-setup, set the pitch to 9. (You type it in directly
after an ALT+LEFT-MOUSE on the pitch gadget. I think!).
once you've gotten this far you're ready to go as far as the screen
is concerned. If the fonts look useable to you there's one last thing
you need to do if you before printing to a postscript file. You need
metric files for the new fonts.
The metric files which came with excellence! are all you need and you
can either rename or copy them. I did a rename since I no longer use
the excellence! fonts:
Rename PTimes.metric Times.metric
Rename PCourier.metric Courier.metric
Rename PHelvetica.metric Helvetica.metric
And your done ...... Good luck.
Frank
|
4554.29 | Fonts and Kerning problems | CGOOA::LEMOINE | | Mon Oct 28 1991 18:37 | 19 |
| Hi Frank,
Thanks for your informative response. I tried your suggestions and
followed the advice of the manual.
I have the correct fonts and pitch settings and I am quite impressed
with the results (quite an improvement over topaz), However I have one
remaining small problem. I composed a document using the Adobe Courier
11 point font then saved as a postscript file, then uploaded to a Vax
and printed on a LN03 ScriptPrinter. The document printed fine except
that some of the Kerning of the text turned out funny. Particularly the
IM occurences ie. in the word Impulse the I and the M are too close
together, I thought that Courier was a monospaced Font ??
Could there be a problem with the Metric file (Courier.metric) ??
I remember you said that you only use Times, was there any
particular reason or do you just like times ?
Regards John Lemoine
|
4554.30 | re .-1 | VSSCAD::GATULIS | Frank Gatulis 226-6140 | Mon Oct 28 1991 20:41 | 41 |
|
John,
I'll upload some courier stuff and take a look it particularly the IM
pairs. Yes, courier IS fixed spacing. Just a thought, but perhaps the
kerning is an illusion where those 2 characters are the opposite
extremes of the actual character widths. I don't know anything about
standards for kerning. Since courier is fixed width, we ought to be
able to whip up some test text (try saying that 10 times fast!) and
take some measurements. Another thing to try is print the same thing on
an LPS40 and LNO3 and see if the printout is identical. Perhaps our
printers are slightly different.
My reason for just using Times? Goes like this - For courier, the
internal fonts in my printer are excellent. If I use my printers
internal courier in conjunction with, NLQ, and a film ribbon, you have
to look close to tell it wasn't done on a laser printer so theres no
need to postscript these. So I do use courier, just not postscript.
Unfortunately I don't have an internal printer "proportional spaced"
font which matches anything on the Amiga. This means I can't get
WYSIWYG between excellence! and my own printer with proportional fonts
so I go the postscript route. I like Times over Helvetica (personal
preference only) for my porportional spaced fonts and I've found the
postscript output from excelence! to be near perfect WYSIWYG. The way
to proove it is to print some stuff on a local printer in graphic mode
and upload a postscript file of the same stuff. After you print the
postscript file make an overhead tranparency and lay it on top of the
graphic mode printout. The kerning of the excellence! our "space" is
slightly different than the LPS but overall output is amazingly close.
Ont thing you'll eventually run into is that the margins are almost always
off when you upload postscript and print on an LPS40. I think that's
an LPS40 paper adjustment variation. Some are OK but most are shifted
such that the print is about 1/4" to the right. The printers are very
consistant so the solution is to check out the printer you use and
make a margin adjustment in excellence! page setup to compensate for
any variation.
Frank
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4554.31 | thanks again | CGOOA::LEMOINE | | Tue Oct 29 1991 11:54 | 10 |
| Hi Frank,
Thanks again for the prompt response. I will try playing around
with the different fonts to see what I like. I guess as you say, a
person just has to find a configuration that they like.
You are right about the font spacing when using the Commodore
supplied Adobe fonts, they do look a bit queer (11 seems small, 13
seems Large) I guess you get so used to seeing 12 point fonts that
anything else seems odd.
Regards John Lemoine
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