[duxuser] Re: New font for math and science

  • From: "George Bell" <info@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 8 Nov 2002 18:03:35 -0000

Hi Mark,

I do get worried when I see statements like, "The symbols will work with pretty 
much any font,"

Or at http://www.stixfonts.org where they say, "the STIX project hopes to 
encourage the development of applications that make use of these fonts."

"pretty much" and "hopes to encourage" are hardly terms which will endear a 
company like Duxbury to invest thousands of Dollars into converting 7,500 
"glyphs" into a braille translation engine.

Let's face it, the screen reader companies have not even managed to get their 
heads round Unicode yet, and that has a much wider application role.

George Bell
Techno-Vision Systems Ltd 


-----Original Message-----
From: Senk, Mark J. [mailto:zia7@xxxxxxx]
Sent: 08 November 2002 17:11
To: 'duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx'
Subject: [duxuser] New font for math and science 






I got this article from a news update compiled by Will Smith.  I imagine this 
is related to Unicode, but maybe fonts are not directly linked to the codes 
they portray.  
I hope it will be possible to easily translate these symbols to Braille using 
software. 
-- article -- 
The Noah's Ark of the Web, 7,000 Characters at a Time 
   By JEFFREY SELINGO 
  IT'S one of the most frustrating problems encountered when passing 
   documents back and forth electronically: the little square boxes that 
   mean a font someone else used to create the file cannot be rendered on 
   your computer. While Portable Document Format, or PDF, files, which 
   essentially are copies of printed pages, have helped mitigate the 
   problem for most computer users, that solution has not satisfied 
   scientists and mathematicians, whose formulas and equations contain 
   many symbols. 
   Using those symbols on the Web has been particularly inconvenient. 
   Most publishers use the symbol-friendly PDF format, but then 
   researchers cannot easily embed links to other files or background 
   information within those documents as they can with HTML files. But 
   HTML documents have their own drawbacks. For instance, they often 
   display equations as separate graphic images that cannot be resized or 
   searched and greatly increase the size of the file. 
   Now a new set of fonts being developed by six publishers of 
   scientific, technical and medical journals promises to contain every 
   character - more than 7,000 in all - that might be needed in a 
   technical article published in any scientific discipline. When 
   complete, sometime next fall, the fonts will be shared freely with 
   publishers, software manufacturers and scholars, under the condition 
   that they not be altered. 
   "This work is a breakthrough for publishers and scientists," said Tim 
   Ingoldsby, director of business development at the American Institute 
   of Physics, one of the publishers working on the project, called the 
   Scientific and Technical Information Exchange, or STIX 
   (www.stixfonts.com). "The display of math symbols in publishing has 
   always been difficult, but those problems have only become worse with 
   the Web." 
   The set of STIX fonts will work very much like the Symbol or Zapf 
   Dingbats fonts in most applications, where users choose from a grid of 
   dozens of characters. The STIX font will have the appearance of a 
   Times font, but the characters will not look any different if a user 
   switches to a different font, like Courier or Helvetica, Mr. Ingoldsby 
   said. "The symbols will work with pretty much any font," he said. 
   Mr. Ingoldsby said most scientific characters lack "flavor" - they are 
   quite plain to look at - so adding one of those symbols to a document 
   composed using, for instance, a serif font, which has fine lines 
   projecting from the main strokes of the letter, will not make the 
   scientific character stand out. Designers are also adding the 
   alphabet, numbers and other common characters to the STIX font, so, 
   Mr. Ingoldsby said, there will be no need to switch between fonts. 
   "This is meant to replace the font which people use today called New 
   Times Roman," he said. 
   About 200 characters of the STIX fonts are being finished each month, 
   Mr. Ingoldsby said. So far, about half of the 7,000 characters have 
   been completed. 
   With so many symbols, however, the STIX fonts could be cumbersome to 
   use. The developers are working to come up with a method that will 
   make it relatively easy for users to find the symbols they want. 
   Symbols will probably be organized by type or subject, with the user 
   selecting a category (and possibly a subcategory) from drop-down 
   menus. A grid of symbols in that category will then appear, from which 
   the user can choose the appropriate one. 
   Creating a new font set is a complicated process. First, developers 
   must correctly copy the shape of each character. Then they must adjust 
   its metrics, or how the character is positioned in the space in which 
   it is supposed to fit. And finally, they must make another set of 
   adjustments to be sure the character looks good on a computer screen. 
   William H. Mischo, head of the Grainger Engineering Library 
   Information Center at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 
   said that the STIX project had the potential to solve a problem that 
   dates back to the 1400's, when Gutenberg first conceived of movable 
   type. 
   "The two biggest problems since then for properly rendering 
   intellectual works have been tables and mathematics," Mr. Mischo said. 
   "Here we are in the digital age and we're still having these 
   problems." 
   Because math equations have been included in Web pages mostly as 
   static images, as either a PDF or a graphics file, scholars have not 
   been able to take advantage of many of the Web's distinctive research 
   capabilities, Mr. Mischo said. For example, a mathematician cannot 
   just plug a particular equation into Google and expect to find other 
   scholars working on a similar problem, since the symbols in a graphic 
   will probably not turn up in a search. 
   "For someone trying to read a scholarly publication, the current way 
   of doing things presents difficulties," Mr. Mischo said. "You can't 
   enlarge, you can't pull it apart and you can't search it." 
   The lack of a comprehensive font for math symbols presents aesthetic 
   problems as well. The text in math publications is usually 
   unattractive because publishers are often forced to cobble together a 
   variety of fonts to create complex equations. 
   "Courier may have one set of math characters and Bookman may have 
   another set of characters, but they are not going to look good 
   together," said Paul Topping, president of Design Science, a company 
   in Long Beach, Calif., that makes an equation editor for [2]Microsoft 
   Word. "STIX will be a coordinated set of fonts that are meant to work 
   together." 
   Of course, new ideas are always being developed in math and science, 
   and some require new symbols. Mr. Ingoldsby, of the American Institute 
   of Physics, said STIX will be updated when new characters are created. 
   "We're trying harder to work with authors so they come up with 


   something new only when there absolutely has to be something new," he 
   said. 
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