dvips: Encodings

 
 6.1.4 Encodings
 ---------------
 
 Every font, whatever its type, has an "encoding", that specifies the
 correspondence between "logical" characters and character codes.  For
 example, the ASCII encoding specifies that the character numbered 65
 (decimal) is an uppercase 'A'. The encoding does not specify what the
 character at that position looks like; there are lots of ways to draw an
 'A', and a glyph file (⇒Glyph files) tells how.  Nor does it
 specify how much space that character occupies; that information is in a
 metric file (⇒Metric files).
 
    TeX implicitly assumes a particular encoding for the fonts you use
 with it.  For example, the plain TeX macro '\'', which typesets an acute
 accent over the following letter, assumes the acute accent is at
 position 19 (decimal).  This happens to be true of standard TeX fonts
 such as Computer Modern, as you might expect, but it is not true of
 normal PostScript fonts.
 
    It's possible but painful to change all the macros that assume
 particular character positions.  A better solution is to create a new
 font with the information for the acute accent at position 19, where TeX
 expects it to be.  ⇒Making a font available.
 
    PostScript represents encodings as a sequence of 256 character names
 called an "encoding vector".  An "encoding file" ('.enc') gives such a
 vector, together with ligature and kerning information (with which we
 are not concerned at the moment).  These encoding files are used by the
 Afm2tfm program.  Encoding files are also downloaded to the PostScript
 interpreter in your printer if you use one of them in place of the
 default encoding vector for a particular PostScript font.
 
    Examples of encodings: the 'dvips.enc' encoding file that comes with
 the Fontname distribution (<http://tug.org/fontname>) is a good (but not
 perfect) approximation to the TeX encoding for TeX's Computer Modern
 text fonts.  This is the encoding of the fonts that originated with
 Dvips, such as 'ptmr.tfm'.  The distribution includes many other
 encoding files; for example, '8r.enc', which is the base font for the
 current PostScript font distribution, and three corresponding to the TeX
 mathematics fonts: 'texmext.enc' for math extensions, 'texmital.enc' for
 math italics, and 'texmsym.enc' for math symbols.