Is it possible to have bold greek letters?
Simply using
.EQ
bold sigma
.EN
doesn't seem to work.
Please advise
Thanks
Anton
> Groff, of course, expects the glyph names used by the original
> Adobe fonts. And it is right to do so.
Yes, but you can of course change that by editing the font
description file used by gtroff, and the text.enc file used
by grops to generate the encoding vector. (Better yet, make
a copy and
> Von: "James Cloos"
>
> Certain versions of fontconfig (upstream) included the TeX GYRE fonts as
> suitable options for (some of) the base postscript font names.
>
> The GYRE fonts use names like /f_i for the ligs, not like /fi. They do
> so better to ensure than the text can be un-ligated whe
> Is it possible to have bold greek letters?
With groff as distributed, using the Postscript device,
it's not possible. You will need to install either a bold
text font that contains Greek letters or a bold symbol font
(plus a corresponding non-bold symbol font for consistency).
For the latter y
>> Is it possible to have bold greek letters?
>
>With groff as distributed, using the Postscript device,
>it's not possible. You will need to install either a bold
>text font that contains Greek letters or a bold symbol font
>(plus a corresponding non-bold symbol font for consistency).
>For the la
>Is it possible to have bold greek letters?
>Simply using
>.EQ
>bold sigma
>.EN
>doesn't seem to work.
>Please advise
>Thanks
>Anton
> Anton Shterenlikht
I had this issue when creating overhead slides in PDF for my lectures
see
http://www.agsm.edu.au/bobm/teaching/SGTM/lect10pr-3.pdf
This is
On 03-Jun-2014 22:06:31 Anton Shterenlikht wrote:
>>> Is it possible to have bold greek letters?
>>
>>With groff as distributed, using the Postscript device,
>>it's not possible. You will need to install either a bold
>>text font that contains Greek letters or a bold symbol font
>>(plus a correspo