Important — variant OT1 font encoding

The package files assume that you have already made the choice of which text font encoding scheme you prefer (T1 or OT1), and that it is the default when the LATEX job starts. However, you may need to override the defaults if you use the OT1 tfm files distributed with dvips, as some characters are not in the expected places. Similarly, Textures users will find things not quite right. For this purpose the package file ot1var is provided; this changes some macro definitions to make the necessary fixes, with options [dvips] and [textures] (default is [dvips]).

Family name Full name
bch Bitstream Charter
hlc B&H Lucida Bright
hlcs B&H Lucida Sans
hlct B&H Lucida Bright Typewriter
pgm Adobe Garamond
mim Monotype Imprint
mnt Monotype Times New Roman
pgm Adobe ITC Garamond
pgs Adobe MGillSans
pgs Adobe MGillSans
plc Adobe Lucida
plcs Adobe Lucida Sans
pnb NewBaskerville
pop Adobe Optima
pun Adobe Univers
put Adobe Utopia-Regular
unmr URW NimbusRoman-Regular
unmrs URW NimbusSans-Regular


Table: Effect of extra package files
Package Sans font Roman font Typewriter font
basker.sty Monotype Baskerville
bembo.sty Bembo
charter Bitstream Charter
garamond.sty Adobe Garamond
mtimes Monotype Times
nimbus URW NimbusSans-Regular URW NimbusRoman-Regular
utopia Utopia
lucid.sty LucidaSans Lucida Courier
lucbr.sty LucidaSans LucidaBright LucidaTypewriter

Notes: a) lucbr.sty uses the font names for Lucida Bright which conform to Karl Berry's scheme. Use package optipn `yy' to use the font names supplied by Y&Y. b) If you want to use just standard PostScript fonts for math, Alan Jeffrey's mathptm package does as good a job as possible (though it still needs access to some CMR math fonts). The extra metric and virtual font files that this needs are supplied with Adobe Times Roman in the CTAN fonts/metrics/adobe/times directory.