Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!clyde.concordia.ca!uunet!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!cica!iuvax!pur-ee!ea.ecn.purdue.edu!housel From: housel@en.ecn.purdue.edu (Peter S. Housel) Newsgroups: comp.text.tex Subject: Re: Concrete Mathematics fonts Message-ID: <19736@ea.ecn.purdue.edu> Date: 1 Mar 90 01:10:43 GMT References: Sender: housel@ea.ecn.purdue.edu Reply-To: housel@en.ecn.purdue.edu (Peter S. Housel) Organization: Purdue University Engineering Computer Network Lines: 21 In article , tim@cstr (Tim Bradshaw) writes: >I have recently been looking at Knuth's `Concrete Mathematics', which >is set with TeX and fonts I believe are a a variation of the `CM >metafont', and are anyway very attractive. What is the availability >of these fonts? Are they on recent TeX tapes, or is the mf source >available? I haven't seen anybody mention that the metafont source for the Concrete fonts is available in the tex82/MFcontrib/metafonts/concrete directory of the UnixTeX distribution. Another thing... I'm certainly no typesetting expert, but the Concrete fonts seem (to me) to look just a little bit too heavy to exactly match with the Euler mathematics fonts. (Other than that, I agree that they are attractive.) Comments, anyone? Another thing, just out of curiousity... has anybody actually read this book without having it as a class text? (It's great stuff, but a real bear to get through, even with the marginal notes :-) -Peter S. Housel- housel@ecn.purdue.edu ...!pur-ee!housel