On Tue, Jun 25, 2024 at 11:13:36AM -0500, G. Branden Robinson wrote: > Subject: Re: [TUHS] Re: Documenting a set of functions with -man > > At 2024-06-25T08:51:39-0400, Douglas McIlroy wrote: > > Since the C/A/T held only four fonts, there was no room for > > Courier. > ... > I had assumed that Kernighan & Ritchie got their hands on a > CAT-8 during the course of preparing _The C Programming > Language_ (1978), since it exhibited use of Courier (upright, > normal weight only) alongside Times: roman and italic, and, for > headings, bold. > ... > So maybe they had access to a CAT-8 after all, and used a > whopping 5 different font plates. Or they used a CAT-4 and had > to compose many pages in two passes. That would have been > mightily tedious.
I've never been anywhere near a CAT phototypesetter, but I doubt that any phototypesetter was capable of handling all the phototypesetting paper needed to print a book in one pass -- either the input or the output cassettes holding the paper had limitations (although I know one company that put their VIP phototypesetters inside a darkroom and let the film or paper run out into a big box, but they still needed to have someone replace the input cassettes). We would generally set no more than a chapter at once. Changing fonts between runs like that was no big deal. The earliest phototypesetter we had, a Compugraphic (I think a 2940, in 1971), only allowed one or two fonts at a time. I think that it actually signalled the operator in the middle of a job when a new font was needed (that's a vague memory). In any case, I think it was common for publications to use more fonts than a machine could handle at one time. Lots of things were patched in at paste-up time. -- Steve -- Steve Izma - Home: 35 Locust St., Kitchener, Ontario, Canada N2H 1W6 Temporary residence: 36 Locust St., Kitchener, Ontario, Canada N2H 1W7 E-mail: si...@golden.net cellphone: 519-998-2684 == The most erroneous stories are those we think we know best – and therefore never scrutinize or question. -- Stephen Jay Gould, *Full House: The Spread of Excellence from Plato to Darwin*, 1996