Hi, Angus Lees: > Erm, no. Many "metric compatible" fonts aren't exactly that way. > See http://www.pragma-ade.com/general/technotes/tfmetrics.pdf for an > interesting comparison of Palatino.
With well-written documents, the worst problem probably is that you get a font that's a bit wider and overruns a tabstop -- that looks bad, but hardly constitutes breakage. In fact I consider that to be a design error in the word processing program: it should indent the next column a bit, instead of shifting everything to the next tabstop. What I had in mind is people who insert a line break by hitting Space until they get to the next line (instead of Shift-Return), or who "design" forms by entering exactly 34 periods so that stuff lines up correctly, or a heap of other stuff amply described in ancient books such as "The Mac is not a Typewriter" (I think that was the first one). I admit that this is a much larger problem with PDFs and similar non-source formats. :-/ -- Matthias Urlichs | {M:U} IT Design @ m-u-it.de | [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]