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Node: <a name="Name%20mapping%20file">Name mapping file</a>,
Next: <a rel="next" accesskey="n" href="Long-naming-scheme.html#Long%20naming%20scheme">Long naming scheme</a>,
Up: <a rel="up" accesskey="u" href="Long-names.html#Long%20names">Long names</a>
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<h3 class="section">A fontname mapping file</h3>
<p>At the moment, most implementations of TeX look up a TFM file (as
part of the <code>\font</code> command), by searching for a file with the name
given by the user (possibly in any of series of directories). But if we
also looked TFM names up in <em>another</em> file (or set of files), which
specifies the actual filename, the fontname given in the TeX source
file could be almost anything at all, of any length.
<p>In version 5.851d of Web2c, I implemented this mapping file. Each file
<code>texfonts.map</code> in a search path is read for abbreviations. The file
has a straightforward format: each line specifies the filename and the
TeX name for one font, separated by whitespace. Extra information on
the line is ignored; then more information could be specified for the
benefit of DVI-reading programs in the same file. Comments start with
<code>%</code> and continue to the end of the line.
<p>Besides allowing long names, this sort of mapping file has other
benefits. TeX source or DVI files can be more easily transported,
because the font names in a particular file can be made work on every
system. Also, when combined with a consistent naming scheme, macros
could be written to access any of a number of fonts. Right now, each
font family has to have specialized macros written to deal with it.
<p>Incidentally, Professor Knuth has approved this as a legitimate
"system-dependent" extension; a TeX with such a feature can still
be called "TeX".
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