home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: comp.lang.postscript
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!csn!raven!rcd
- From: rcd@raven.eklektix.com (Dick Dunn)
- Subject: Re: Postscript Font Scaling & Reduction
- Message-ID: <1992Nov22.000148@eklektix.com>
- Summary: a bit on "optimum size"
- Organization: eklektix - Boulder, Colorado
- References: <1992Nov20.020424.5847@adobe.com> <By0tC5.5Fs@mentor.cc.purdue.edu>
- Date: Sun, 22 Nov 1992 00:01:48 GMT
- Lines: 53
-
- ab@nova.cc.purdue.edu (Allen B) writes:
- >mmwang@adobe.com (Michael Wang) writes:
- >> As the point size gets smaller than this optimum size, reading
- >> comprehension begins to suffer ... Conversely, as the point size
- >> gets larger, reading speed suffers ...
- ...
- >...I'm just wondering how the optimum size is related to size
- >(or, I guess it would be better to say "extent") and
- >resolution.
- ...
- >Let's not worry about resolution for the moment. We can
- >avoid that by assuming we're talking about billboards or
- >very high resolution printer output. The extent of a
- >character on a billboard might be the same as that on a page
- >at the expected viewing distance for both...
-
- Yes, but there's one more factor which influences optimum size: There's an
- optimum viewing distance for the eye. That is, the eye works best at one
- particular distance. If you look at 10 pt type from 1 foot distance, or
- 1000 pt type from 100 ft, the type has about the same apparent size (sub-
- tends the same angle of view) to the eye...but the two aren't equally
- readable. For "normal" eyes, the close-in type is more easily read.
-
- You can experiment with the eye's ability to resolve fine detail at various
- distances. In effect, you create a test chart of a certain size and use it
- to test at one particular distance. Then, say you double the size of the
- test; use it to test at twice the distance. Increase the size again and
- increase the viewing distance by the same factor, test again. What these
- experiments find is that the eye's performance has a noticeable peak in
- resolving power; resolution drops off at distances smaller or larger. For
- a normal eye (for some definition of "normal":-), the optimum distance is
- supposed to be on the order of 25 cm or a little more. (Make your rule of
- thumb 25 cm if you use metric, a foot if you use English system.:-) This
- pins down one more constraint in choosing the best range of type size--
- you know that it's not going to make sense to print in thumbnail format in
- 3-pt type for a book to be held just beyond the nose, nor at 18-pt in a
- large format held at arm's length. (This also gives one reason why "large
- format" books for people with slight visual impairment won't become the
- norm--they're not only more cumbersome; they're not as comfortably readable
- to the average eye.)
-
- >In Type 1 fonts, all the hinting is aimed at resolution
- >limits and it seems to work OK. What type of hinting
- >mechanism would help optical scaling? It'd be based on
- >actual size (or extent if we know it), right?
-
- It would be better to specify the desired effective (optical) size
- explicitly. That way (a) you don't get in trouble with re-scaling the
- output by photo-reduction or the like, and (b) you don't have as much
- bum code in applications grubbing around in the CTM.
- --
- Dick Dunn rcd@raven.eklektix.com -or- raven!rcd Boulder, Colorado
- ...Simpler is better.
-