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IABSD.fr/xenocara/doc/xorg-docs/specs/XLFD

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  • Author : matthieu
    Date : 2006-11-29 16:49:19
    Hash : 80a99e45
    Message : Import specs from xorg-docs 1.3

  • xlfd.tbl.ms
  • .\" Use tbl and -ms and macros.t	-*- Nroff -*-
    .\" $Xorg: xlfd.tbl.ms,v 1.3 2000/08/17 19:42:22 cpqbld Exp $
    .\" $XdotOrg: xc/doc/specs/XLFD/xlfd.tbl.ms,v 1.2 2004/04/23 18:42:17 eich Exp $
    .nr sM 4		\" section on Matrix Transformations
    .nr sS 5		\" section on Scalable fonts
    .nr sP 6		\" section on Polymorphic font support
    .EH ''''
    .OH ''''
    .EF ''''
    .OF ''''
    .ps 11
    .nr PS 11
    .if n .nr LL 72m
    \&
    .sp 8
    .ce 100
    \s+2\fBX Logical Font Description Conventions\fP\s-2
    
    \fBVersion 1.5\fP
    
    \fBX Consortium Standard\fP
    
    \fBX Version 11, Release 6.8\fP
    .sp 6
    \s+1Jim Flowers\s-1
    .sp 6p
    \s+1Digital Equipment Corporation\s-1
    .sp 6
    \s+1Version 1.5 edited by Stephen Gildea\s0
    .sp 6p
    \s+1X Consortium, Inc.\s0
    .ce 0
    .bp
    \&
    .ps 9
    .nr PS 9
    .sp 8
    .LP
    \fIX Window System\fP is a trademark of The Open Group.
    .LP             
    Helvetica and Times are registered trademarks of Linotype Company.
    .LP
    ITC Avant Garde Gothic is a registered trademark of International 
    Typeface Corporation.
    .LP
    Times Roman is a registered trademark of Monotype Corporation.
    .LP
    Bitstream Amerigo is a registered trademark of Bitstream Inc.
    .LP             
    Stone is a registered trademark of Adobe Systems Inc.
    .LP
    Copyright \(co 1988, 1994 X Consortium
    .LP
    Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
    a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
    \*QSoftware\*U), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
    without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
    distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
    permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
    the following conditions:
    .LP
    The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
    in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
    .LP
    THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED \*QAS IS\*U, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS
    OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
    MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
    IN NO EVENT SHALL THE X CONSORTIUM BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR
    OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE,
    ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR
    OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
    .LP
    Except as contained in this notice, the name of the X Consortium shall
    not be used in advertising or otherwise to promote the sale, use or
    other dealings in this Software without prior written authorization
    from the X Consortium.
    .LP
    Copyright \(co 1988, 1989 
    Digital Equipment Corporation, Maynard MA.  All rights reserved.
    .LP 
    Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this documentation 
    for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, provided 
    that the above copyright notice and this permission 
    notice appear in all copies.
    Digital Equipment Corporation makes no representations
    about the 
    suitability for any purpose of the information in this document. 
    This documentation is provided as is without express or implied warranty. 
    .ps 11
    .nr PS 11
    .bp 1
    .EH '\fBX Logical Font Description Conventions\fP''\fBX11, Release 6.8\fP'
    .OH '\fBX Logical Font Description Conventions\fP''\fBX11, Release 6.8\fP'
    .EF ''\fB\\\\n(PN\fP''
    .OF ''\fB\\\\n(PN\fP''
    .NH 1 
    Introduction
    .XS
    \*(SN Introduction
    .XE
    .LP 
    It is a requirement that X client applications must be portable across server
    implementations, with very different file systems, naming conventions, and 
    font libraries.
    However, font access requests, 
    as defined by the \fIX Window System Protocol\fP,
    neither specify server-independent conventions for font names 
    nor provide adequate font properties for logically describing typographic fonts.
    .LP
    X clients must be able to dynamically determine the fonts available 
    on any given server so that understandable information can be presented 
    to the user or so that intelligent font fallbacks can be chosen.
    It is desirable for the most common queries to be accomplished 
    without the overhead of opening each font and inspecting font properties, 
    by means of simple 
    .PN ListFonts 
    requests.
    For example, if a user selected a Helvetica typeface family, 
    a client application should be able to query the server 
    for all Helvetica fonts and present only those setwidths, weights, slants, 
    point sizes, and character sets available for that family.
    .LP
    This document gives a standard logical font description 
    (hereafter referred to as XLFD) and the conventions to be used 
    in the core protocol so that clients can query and access screen type libraries
    in a consistent manner across all X servers.
    In addition to completely specifying a given font by means of its 
    .PN FontName ,
    the XLFD also provides for a standard set of key 
    .PN FontProperties
    that describe the font in more detail.
    .LP
    The XLFD provides an adequate set of typographic font properties, 
    such as \s-1CAP_HEIGHT\s+1, \s-1X_HEIGHT\s+1,
    and \s-1RELATIVE_SETWIDTH\s+1, 
    for publishing and other applications to do intelligent font matching 
    or substitution when handling documents created on some foreign server 
    that use potentially unknown fonts.
    In addition, 
    this information is required by certain clients 
    to position subscripts automatically and determine small capital heights, 
    recommended leading, word-space values, and so on.
    .NH 1
    Requirements and Goals
    .XS
    \*(SN Requirements and Goals
    .XE
    .LP 
    The XLFD meets the short-term and long-term goals to have a 
    standard logical font description that:
    .IP \(bu 5
    Provides unique, descriptive font names that support simple pattern
    matching
    .IP \(bu 5
    Supports multiple font vendors, arbitrary character sets, and encodings
    .IP \(bu 5
    Supports naming and instancing of scalable and polymorphic fonts
    .IP \(bu 5
    Supports transformations and subsetting of fonts
    .IP \(bu 5
    Is independent of X server and operating or file system implementations
    .IP \(bu 5
    Supports arbitrarily complex font matching or substitution
    .IP \(bu 5
    Is extensible
    .NH 2
    Provide Unique and Descriptive Font Names
    .XS
    \*(SN Provide Unique and Descriptive Font Names
    .XE
    .LP
    It should be possible to have font names that are long enough and 
    descriptive enough to have a reasonable probability of being unique 
    without inventing a new registration organization.
    Resolution and size-dependent font masters, multivendor font libraries, 
    and so on must be anticipated and handled by the font name alone.
    .LP
    The name itself should be structured to be amenable to simple pattern 
    matching and parsing, thus allowing X clients to restrict font queries to 
    some subset of all possible fonts in the server.
    .NH 2
    Support Multiple Font Vendors and Character Sets
    .XS
    \*(SN Support Multiple Font Vendors and Character Sets
    .XE
    .LP
    The font name and properties should distinguish between fonts 
    that were supplied by different font vendors 
    but that possibly share the same name.
    We anticipate a highly competitive font market where users will be able to 
    buy fonts from many sources according to their particular requirements.
    .LP
    A number of font vendors deliver each font with all glyphs designed for that
    font, where charset mappings are defined by encoding vectors.
    Some server implementations may force these mappings to proprietary 
    or standard charsets statically in the font data.
    Others may desire to perform the mapping dynamically in the server.
    Provisions must be made in the font name 
    that allows a font request to specify or identify specific charset mappings 
    in server environments where multiple charsets are supported.
    .NH 2
    Support Scalable and Polymorphic Fonts
    .XS
    \*(SN Support Scalable and Polymorphic Fonts
    .XE
    .LP
    If a font source can be scaled to an arbitrary size or varied in other
    ways, it should be possible for an application to determine
    that fact from the font name, and the
    application should be able to construct a font name for any specific
    instance.
    .NH 2
    Support Transformations and Subsetting of Fonts
    .XS
    \*(SN Support Transformations and Subsetting of Fonts
    .XE
    .LP
    Arbitrary two-dimensional linear transformations of fonts should be
    able to be requested by applications.  Since such transformed fonts
    may be used for special effects requiring a few characters from each
    of many differently transformed fonts, it should be possible to
    request only a few characters from a font for efficiency.
    .NH 2
    Be Independent of X Server and Operating or File System Implementations
    .XS
    \*(SN Be Independent of X Server and Operating or File System Implementations
    .XE
    .LP
    X client applications that require a particular font should be able to use 
    the descriptive name without knowledge of the file system or other 
    repository in use by the server.
    However, 
    it should be possible for servers to translate a given font name 
    into a file name syntax that it knows how to deal with,
    without compromising the uniqueness of the font name.
    This algorithm should be reversible (exactly how this translation is done is 
    implementation dependent).
    .NH 2
    Support Arbitrarily Complex Font Matching and Substitution
    .XS
    \*(SN Support Arbitrarily Complex Font Matching and Substitution
    .XE
    .LP
    In addition to the font name, 
    the XLFD should define a standard list of descriptive font properties,
    with agreed-upon fallbacks for all fonts.
    This allows client applications to derive font-specific formatting 
    or display data and to perform font matching or substitution 
    when asked to handle potentially unknown fonts, as required.
    .NH 2
    Be Extensible
    .XS
    \*(SN Be Extensible
    .XE
    .LP
    The XLFD must be extensible so that new and/or private descriptive font 
    properties can be added to conforming fonts without making existing 
    X client or server implementations obsolete.
    .NH 1
    X Logical Font Description
    .XS
    \*(SN X Logical Font Description
    .XE
    .LP
    XLFD is divided into two basic components: 
    the 
    .PN FontName , 
    which gives all font information needed to uniquely identify a font 
    in X protocol requests (for example,
    .PN OpenFont , 
    .PN ListFonts , 
    and so on) and a variable list of optional 
    .PN FontProperties ,
    which describe a font in more detail.
    .LP
    The 
    .PN FontName 
    is used in font queries and is returned as data in certain X protocol requests.
    It is also specified as the data value for the 
    .PN FONT
    item in the X Consortium Character Bitmap Distribution Format Standard
    (BDF V2.1).
    .LP
    The 
    .PN FontProperties 
    are supplied on a font-by-font basis and are returned 
    as data in certain X protocol requests as part of the 
    .PN XFontStruct
    data structure.
    The names and associated data values for each of the 
    .PN FontProperties 
    may also appear as items of the 
    \s-1\fBSTARTPROPERTIES\fP\s+1...\s-1\fBENDPROPERTIES\fP\s+1 list 
    in the BDF V2.1 specification.
    .NH 2
    FontName
    .XS
    \*(SN FontName
    .XE
    .LP
    Each 
    .PN FontName 
    is logically composed of two strings: a 
    .PN FontNameRegistry
    prefix that is followed by a 
    .PN FontNameSuffix .
    The
    .PN FontName
    uses the ISO 8859-1 encoding.
    The 
    .PN FontNameRegistry
    is an
    .IN x-registered-name
    x-registered-name (a name that has been registered with the X Consortium)
    that identifies the registration authority that owns the specified 
    .PN FontNameSuffix
    syntax and semantics.
    .LP
    All font names that conform to this specification are to use a 
    .PN FontNameRegistry
    prefix, which is defined to be the string \*Q\-\*U
    (HYPHEN).
    All 
    .PN FontNameRegistry 
    prefixes of the form: +\fIversion\fP\-,
    where the specified version indicates some future XLFD specification, 
    are reserved by the X Consortium for future extensions to XLFD font names.
    If required, extensions to the current XLFD font name shall be constructed 
    by appending new fields to the current structure, 
    each delimited by the existing field delimiter.
    The availability of other 
    .PN FontNameRegistry
    prefixes or fonts that support other registries 
    is server implementation dependent.
    .LP
    In the X protocol specification, 
    the 
    .PN FontName 
    is required to be a string; 
    hence, numeric field values are represented in the name as string equivalents.
    All 
    .PN FontNameSuffix 
    fields are also defined as 
    .PN FontProperties ; 
    numeric property values are represented as signed or unsigned integers,
    as appropriate.
    .NH 3
    FontName Syntax
    .XS
    \*(SN FontName Syntax
    .XE
    .LP
    The
    .PN FontName 
    is a structured, parsable string (of type STRING8) 
    whose Backus-Naur Form syntax description is as follows:
    .IN "FontName Syntax"
    .SM
    .TS 
    rw(1.5i) lw(3.75i).
    .sp 6p
    T{
    FontName ::=
    T}	T{
    XFontNameRegistry XFontNameSuffix | 
    PrivFontNameRegistry PrivFontNameSuffix
    T}
    T{
    XFontNameRegistry ::=
    T}	T{
    XFNDelim | XFNExtPrefix Version XFNDelim
    T}
    T{
    XFontNameSuffix ::=
    T}	T{
    FOUNDRY XFNDelim FAMILY_NAME XFNDelim WEIGHT_NAME
    XFNDelim SLANT XFNDelim SETWIDTH_NAME XFNDelim ADD_
    STYLE_NAME XFNDelim PIXEL_SIZE XFNDelim POINT_SIZE 
    XFNDelim RESOLUTION_X XFNDelim RESOLUTION_Y XFNDelim 
    SPACING XFNDelim AVERAGE_WIDTH XFNDelim CHARSET_REGISTRY
    XFNDelim CHARSET_ENCODING
    T}
    T{
    Version ::=
    T}	T{
    STRING8 \- the XLFD version that defines an extension 
    to the font name syntax (for example, \*Q1.4\*U)
    T}
    XFNExtPrefix ::=	OCTET \- \*Q+\*U (PLUS)
    XFNDelim ::=	OCTET \- \*Q\-\*U (HYPHEN)
    T{
    PrivFontNameRegistry ::=
    T}	T{
    STRING8 \- other than those strings reserved by XLFD
    T}
    PrivFontNameSuffix ::=	STRING8
    .TE
    .NL
    .LP
    Field values are constructed as strings of ISO 8859-1 graphic characters, 
    excluding the following:
    .IP \(bu 5
    \*Q\-\*U (HYPHEN), the XLFD font name delimiter character
    .IP \(bu 5
    \*Q?\*U (QUESTION MARK) and \*Q*\*U (ASTERISK), the X protocol 
    font name wildcard characters
    .IP \(bu 5
    \*Q\^,\^\*U (COMMA), used by Xlib to separate XLFD font names in a font set.
    .IP \(bu 5
    \*Q\fC"\fP\*U (QUOTATION MARK), used by some commercial products to quote a
    font name.
    .LP
    Alphabetic case distinctions are allowed but are for human readability 
    concerns only.
    Conforming X servers will perform matching on font name query or open requests 
    independent of case.
    The entire font name string must have no more than 255 characters.
    It is recommended that clients construct font name query patterns 
    by explicitly including all field delimiters to avoid unexpected results.
    Note that SPACE is a valid character of a 
    .PN FontName 
    field; for example, the string \*QITC Avant Garde Gothic\*U might be a
    FAMILY_NAME.
    .NH 3
    FontName Field Definitions
    .XS
    \*(SN FontName Field Definitions
    .XE
    .LP
    This section discusses the
    .PN FontName :
    .IP \(bu 5
    FOUNDRY field
    .IP \(bu 5
    FAMILY_NAME field
    .IP \(bu 5
    WEIGHT_NAME field
    .IP \(bu 5
    SLANT field
    .IP \(bu 5
    SETWIDTH_NAME field
    .IP \(bu 5
    ADD_STYLE_NAME field
    .IP \(bu 5
    PIXEL_SIZE field
    .IP \(bu 5
    POINT_SIZE field
    .IP \(bu 5
    RESOLUTION_X and RESOLUTION_Y fields
    .IP \(bu 5
    SPACING field
    .IP \(bu 5
    AVERAGE_WIDTH field
    .IP \(bu 5
    CHARSET_REGISTRY and CHARSET_ENCODING fields
    .NH 4
    FOUNDRY Field
    .XS
    \*(SN FOUNDRY Field
    .XE
    .LP
    FOUNDRY is an x-registered-name,
    the name or identifier of the digital type foundry 
    that digitized and supplied the font data, 
    or if different, the identifier of the organization that last modified 
    the font shape or metric information.
    .LP
    The reason this distinction is necessary is 
    that a given font design may be licensed from one source (for example, ITC) 
    but digitized and sold by any number of different type suppliers.
    Each digital version of the original design, in general, will be somewhat 
    different in metrics and shape from the idealized original font data, 
    because each font foundry, for better or for worse, has its own standards 
    and practices for tweaking a typeface for a particular generation 
    of output technologies or has its own perception of market needs.
    .LP
    It is up to the type supplier to register with the X Consortium a 
    suitable name for this 
    .PN FontName 
    field according to the registration procedures defined by the Consortium.
    .LP
    The X Consortium shall define procedures for registering foundry 
    and other names and shall maintain and publish, 
    as part of its public distribution, 
    a registry of such registered names for use in XLFD font names and properties.
    .LP
    .NH 4
    FAMILY_NAME Field
    .XS
    \*(SN FAMILY_NAME Field
    .XE
    .LP
    FAMILY_NAME is a string that identifies the range or family of 
    typeface designs that are all variations of one basic typographic style.
    This must be spelled out in full,
    with words separated by spaces, as required.
    This name must be human-understandable and suitable for presentation to a 
    font user to identify the typeface family.
    .LP
    It is up to the type supplier to supply and maintain a suitable string for 
    this field and font property, to secure the proper legal title to a given 
    name, and to guard against the infringement of other's copyrights or 
    trademarks.
    By convention, FAMILY_NAME is not translated.
    FAMILY_NAME may include an indication of design ownership 
    if considered a valid part of the 
    typeface family name.
    .LP
    The following are examples of FAMILY_NAME:
    .IP \(bu 5
    Helvetica
    .IP \(bu 5
    ITC Avant Garde Gothic 
    .IP \(bu 5
    Times
    .IP \(bu 5
    Times Roman
    .IP \(bu 5
    Bitstream Amerigo
    .IP \(bu 5
    Stone
    .NH 4
    WEIGHT_NAME Field
    .XS
    \*(SN WEIGHT_NAME Field
    .XE
    .LP
    WEIGHT_NAME is a string that identifies the font's typographic weight, 
    that is, the nominal blackness of the font, 
    according to the FOUNDRY's judgment.
    This name must be human-understandable and suitable for presentation to a 
    font user.
    The value \*Q0\*U is used to indicate a polymorphic font (see section \n(sP).
    .LP
    The interpretation of this field is somewhat problematic 
    because the typographic judgment of weight has traditionally 
    depended on the overall design of the typeface family in question;
    that is, it is possible that the DemiBold weight of one font could be 
    almost equivalent in typographic feel to a Bold font from another family.
    .LP
    WEIGHT_NAME is captured as an arbitrary string 
    because it is an important part of a font's complete human-understandable name.
    However, it should not be used for font matching or substitution.
    For this purpose,
    X client applications should use the weight-related font properties 
    (RELATIVE_WEIGHT and WEIGHT) that give the coded relative weight 
    and the calculated weight, respectively.
    .NH 4
    SLANT Field
    .XS
    \*(SN SLANT Field
    .XE
    .LP
    SLANT is a code-string that indicates the overall posture of the 
    typeface design used in the font.
    The encoding is as follows:
    .TS H
    lw(.5i) lw(1.25i) lw(3.5i).
    _
    .sp 6p
    .B
    Code	English Translation	Description
    .sp 6p
    _
    .sp 6p
    .TH
    .R
    \*QR\*U	Roman	Upright design
    \*QI\*U	Italic	T{
    Italic design, slanted clockwise from the vertical
    T}
    \*QO\*U	Oblique	T{
    Obliqued upright design, slanted clockwise from the vertical
    T}
    \*QRI\*U	Reverse Italic	T{
    Italic design, slanted counterclockwise from the vertical
    T}
    \*QRO\*U	Reverse Oblique	T{
    Obliqued upright design, slanted counterclockwise from the vertical
    T}
    \*QOT\*U	Other	Other
    numeric	Polymorphic	See section \n(sP on polymorphic font support.
    .sp 6p
    _
    .TE
    .LP
    The SLANT codes are for programming convenience only and usually are 
    converted into their equivalent human-understandable form before being 
    presented to a user.
    .NH 4
    SETWIDTH_NAME Field
    .XS
    \*(SN SETWIDTH_NAME Field
    .XE
    .LP 
    SETWIDTH_NAME is a string that gives the font's typographic 
    proportionate width, that is, the nominal width per horizontal unit of the 
    font, according to the FOUNDRY's judgment.
    The value \*Q0\*U is used to indicate a polymorphic font (see section \n(sP).
    .LP
    As with WEIGHT_NAME, the interpretation of this field or font property is 
    somewhat problematic, because the designer's judgment of setwidth has 
    traditionally depended on the overall design of the typeface family in 
    question.
    For purposes of font matching or substitution,
    X client applications should either use the RELATIVE_SETWIDTH font property 
    that gives the relative coded proportionate width or calculate 
    the proportionate width.
    .LP
    The following are examples of SETWIDTH_NAME:
    .IP \(bu 5
    Normal 
    .IP \(bu 5
    Condensed 
    .IP \(bu 5
    Narrow 
    .IP \(bu 5
    Double Wide
    .NH 4
    ADD_STYLE_NAME Field
    .XS
    \*(SN ADD_STYLE_NAME Field
    .XE
    .LP
    ADD_STYLE_NAME is a string that identifies additional typographic 
    style information that is not captured by other fields but is needed 
    to identify the particular font.
    The character \*Q[\*U anywhere in the field is used to indicate a
    polymorphic font (see section \n(sP).
    .LP
    ADD_STYLE_NAME is not a typeface classification field 
    and is only used for uniqueness.
    Its use, as such, is not limited to typographic style distinctions.
    .LP
    The following are examples of ADD_STYLE_NAME:
    .IP \(bu 5
    Serif
    .IP \(bu 5
    Sans Serif
    .IP \(bu 5
    Informal
    .IP \(bu 5
    Decorated
    .NH 4
    PIXEL_SIZE Field
    .XS
    \*(SN PIXEL_SIZE Field
    .XE
    .LP 
    PIXEL_SIZE
    gives the body size of the font at a particular 
    POINT_SIZE and RESOLUTION_Y.
    PIXEL_SIZE is either an integer-string or a string beginning
    with \*Q[\*U.  A string beginning with \*Q[\*U represents a matrix
    (see section \n(sM).
    PIXEL_SIZE usually incorporates additional vertical spacing 
    that is considered part of the font design.
    (Note, however, that this value is not necessarily equivalent to the height 
    of the font bounding box.)
    Zero is used to indicate a scalable font (see section \n(sS).
    .LP
    PIXEL_SIZE usually is used by X client applications that need to 
    query fonts according to device-dependent size, 
    regardless of the point size or vertical resolution 
    for which the font was designed.
    .NH 4
    POINT_SIZE Field
    .XS
    \*(SN POINT_SIZE Field
    .XE
    .LP 
    POINT_SIZE gives the body size 
    for which the font was designed.
    POINT_SIZE is either an integer-string or a string beginning
    with \*Q[\*U.  A string beginning with \*Q[\*U represents a matrix
    (see section \n(sM).
    This field usually incorporates additional vertical spacing 
    that is considered part of the font design.
    (Note, however, that POINT_SIZE is not necessarily equivalent to the height 
    of the font bounding box.) 
    POINT_SIZE is expressed in decipoints (where points are as defined 
    in the X protocol or 72.27 points equal 1 inch).
    Zero is used to indicate a scalable font (see section \n(sS).
    .LP
    POINT_SIZE and RESOLUTION_Y are used by X clients to query fonts 
    according to device-independent size to maintain constant text 
    size on the display regardless of the PIXEL_SIZE used for the font.
    .NH 4
    RESOLUTION_X and RESOLUTION_Y Fields
    .XS
    \*(SN RESOLUTION_X and RESOLUTION_Y Fields
    .XE
    .LP 
    RESOLUTION_X and RESOLUTION_Y are unsigned integer-strings that give 
    the horizontal and vertical resolution,
    measured in pixels or dots per inch (dpi),
    for which the font was designed.
    Zero is used to indicate a scalable font (see section \n(sS).
    Horizontal and vertical values are required 
    because a separate bitmap font must be designed 
    for displays with very different aspect ratios
    (for example, 1:1, 4:3, 2:1, and so on).
    .LP 
    The separation of pixel or point size and resolution is necessary 
    because X allows for servers with very different video characteristics 
    (for example, horizontal and vertical resolution, screen and pixel size, 
    pixel shape, and so on) to potentially access the same font library.
    The font name, for example, must differentiate between a 14-point font designed
    for 75 dpi (body size of about 14 pixels) or a 14-point font designed 
    for 150 dpi (body size of about 28 pixels).
    Further, in servers that implement some or all fonts as continuously scaled 
    and scan-converted outlines,
    POINT_SIZE and RESOLUTION_Y will help the server to differentiate 
    between potentially separate font masters for text, title,
    and display sizes or for other typographic considerations.
    .NH 4 
    SPACING Field
    .XS
    \*(SN SPACING Field
    .XE
    .LP 
    SPACING is a code-string that indicates the escapement class of the font, 
    that is, monospace (fixed pitch), proportional (variable pitch), 
    or charcell (a special monospaced font that conforms to the traditional 
    data-processing character cell font model).
    The encoding is as follows:
    .ne 5
    .SM
    .TS H
    lw(.5i) lw(1.25i) lw(3.5i).
    _
    .sp 6p
    .B
    Code	English Translation	Description
    .sp 6p
    _
    .sp 6p
    .TH
    .R
    \*QP\*U	Proportional	T{
    A font whose logical character widths vary for each glyph.
    Note that no other restrictions are placed on the metrics 
    of a proportional font.
    T}
    \*QM\*U	Monospaced	T{
    A font whose logical character widths are constant 
    (that is, every glyph in the font has the same logical width).
    No other restrictions are placed on the metrics of a monospaced font.
    T}
    \*QC\*U	CharCell	T{
    A monospaced font that follows the standard typewriter character cell model
    (that is, the glyphs of the font can be modeled by X clients as \*Qboxes\*U 
    of the same width and height that are imaged side-by-side 
    to form text strings or top-to-bottom to form text lines).
    By definition, 
    all glyphs have the same logical character width, 
    and no glyphs have \*Qink\*U outside of the character cell.
    There is no kerning (that is, on a per-character basis with positive metrics: 
    0 <= left-bearing <= right-bearing <= width; 
    with negative metrics: width <= left-bearing <= right-bearing <= zero).
    Also, the vertical extents of the font do not exceed the vertical spacing 
    (that is, on a per-character basis: 
    ascent <= font-ascent and descent <= font-descent).
    The cell height = font-descent + font-ascent, and the width = AVERAGE_WIDTH.
    T}
    .sp 6p
    _
    .TE
    .NL
    .NH 4
    AVERAGE_WIDTH Field
    .XS
    \*(SN AVERAGE_WIDTH Field
    .XE
    .LP 
    AVERAGE_WIDTH is an integer-string typographic metric value 
    that gives the unweighted arithmetic mean of the absolute value of the
    width of each glyph in the font 
    (measured in tenths of pixels), multiplied by \-1 if the dominant
    writing direction for the font is right-to-left.
    A leading \*Q\^~\^\*U (TILDE) indicates a negative value.
    For monospaced and character cell fonts, 
    this is the width of all glyphs in the font.
    Zero is used to indicate a scalable font (see section \n(sS).
    .NH 4
    CHARSET_REGISTRY and CHARSET_ENCODING Fields
    .XS
    \*(SN CHARSET_REGISTRY and CHARSET_ENCODING Fields
    .XE
    .LP
    The character set used to encode the glyphs of the font (and implicitly 
    the font's glyph repertoire), as maintained by the X Consortium character
    set registry.
    CHARSET_REGISTRY is an x-registered-name that identifies 
    the registration authority that owns the specified encoding.
    CHARSET_ENCODING is a registered name that identifies the coded character set 
    as defined by that registration authority
    and, optionally, a subsetting hint.
    .LP
    Although the X protocol does not explicitly have any knowledge about 
    character set encodings, 
    it is expected that server implementors will prefer to embed knowledge 
    of certain proprietary or standard charsets into their font library 
    for reasons of performance and convenience.
    The CHARSET_REGISTRY and CHARSET_ENCODING fields or properties allow 
    an X client font request to specify a specific charset mapping 
    in server environments where multiple charsets are supported.
    The availability of any particular 
    character set is font and server implementation dependent.
    .LP
    To prevent collisions when defining character set names, 
    it is recommended that CHARSET_REGISTRY and CHARSET_ENCODING name pairs 
    be constructed according to the following conventions:
    .IN "CHARSET Syntax"
    .SM
    .TS
    rw(1.5i) lw(3.75i).
    .sp 6p
    CharsetRegistry ::=	T{
    StdCharsetRegistryName | PrivCharsetRegistryName
    T}
    CharsetEncoding ::=	T{
    StdCharsetEncodingName | PrivCharsetEncodingName
    T}
    StdCharsetRegistryName ::=	T{
    StdOrganizationId StdNumber | StdOrganizationId StdNumber Dot Year
    T}
    PrivCharsetRegistryName ::=	OrganizationId STRING8
    StdCharsetEncodingName ::=	T{
    STRING8\-numeric part number of referenced standard
    T}
    PrivCharsetEncodingName ::=	STRING8
    StdOrganizationId ::=	T{
    STRING8\-the registered name or acronym of the referenced standard organization
    T}
    StdNumber ::=	STRING8\-referenced standard number
    OrganizationId ::=	T{
    STRING8\-the registered name or acronym of the organization
    T}
    Dot ::=	OCTET\-\*Q\^.\^\*U (FULL STOP)
    Year ::=	STRING8\-numeric year (for example, 1989)
    .TE
    .NL
    .LP
    The X Consortium shall maintain and publish a registry 
    of such character set names for use in X protocol font names and properties 
    as specified in XLFD.
    .LP
    The ISO Latin-1 character set shall be registered by the X Consortium as the 
    CHARSET_REGISTRY-CHARSET_ENCODING value pair: \*QISO8859-1\*U.
    .LP
    If the CHARSET_ENCODING contains a \*Q[\*U (LEFT SQUARE BRACKET),
    the \*Q[\*U and the characters after it up to a \*Q]\*U (RIGHT SQUARE
    BRACKET) are a
    subsetting hint telling the font source that the client is interested
    only in a subset of the characters of the font.
    The font source can, optionally, return a font that
    contains only those characters or any superset of those characters.  The
    client can expect to obtain valid glyphs and metrics only for those
    characters, and not for any other characters in the font.
    The font properties may optionally be calculated by considering only
    the characters in the subset.
    .LP
    The BNF for the subsetting hint is
    .SM
    .TS
    rw(1.5i) l.
    Subset ::=	LeftBracket RangeList RightBracket
    RangeList ::=	Range | Range Space RangeList
    Range ::=	Number | Number Underscore Number
    Number ::=	\*Q0x\*U HexNumber | DecNumber
    HexNumber ::=	HexDigit | HexDigit HexNumber
    DecNumber ::=	DecDigit | DecDigit DecNumber
    DecDigit ::=	\*Q0\*U | \*Q1\*U | \*Q2\*U | \*Q3\*U | \*Q4\*U | \*Q5\*U | \*Q6\*U | \*Q7\*U | \*Q8\*U | \*Q9\*U
    HexDigit ::=	DecDigit | \*Qa\*U | \*Qb\*U | \*Qc\*U | \*Qd\*U | \*Qe\*U | \*Qf\*U
    LeftBracket ::=	\*Q[\*U (LEFT SQUARE BRACKET)
    RightBracket ::=	\*Q]\*U (RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET)
    Space ::=	\*Q\0\*U (SPACE)
    Underscore ::=	\*Q_\*U (LOW LINE)
    .TE
    .NL
    .LP
    Each Range specifies characters that are to be part of the subset
    included in the font.
    A Range containing two Numbers specifies the first and last character,
    inclusively, of a range of characters.
    A Range that is a single Number specifies a single character to be
    included in the font.
    A HexNumber is interpreted as a hexadecimal number.
    A DecNumber is interpreted as a decimal number.
    The font consists of the union of all the Ranges in the
    RangeList.
    .LP
    For example,
    .br
    .ft C
    .SM
    	-misc-fixed-medium-r-normal--0-0-0-0-c-0-iso8859-1[65 70 80_90]
    .NL
    .ft P
    .br
    tells the font source that the client is interested only in characters
    65, 70, and 80\-90.
    .NH 3
    Examples
    .XS
    \*(SN Examples
    .XE
    .LP
    The following examples of font names are derived from the screen fonts 
    shipped with the X Consortium distribution.
    .\" why is this table so long?  I took out some fonts in v1.5
    .\" to make the page breaks better.
    .SM
    .TS H
    lw(1.45i) lw(4.45i).
    _
    .sp 6p
    .B
    Font	X FontName
    .sp 6p
    _
    .sp 6p
    .TH
    .R
    \fB75-dpi Fonts\fP
    .sp 3p
    T{
    Charter 12 pt
    T}	T{
    -Bitstream-Charter-Medium-R-Normal--12-120-75-75-P-68-ISO8859-1
    T}
    T{
    Charter Bold 12 pt
    T}	T{
    -Bitstream-Charter-Bold-R-Normal--12-120-75-75-P-76-ISO8859-1
    T}
    T{
    Charter Bold Italic 12 pt
    T}	T{
    -Bitstream-Charter-Bold-I-Normal--12-120-75-75-P-75-ISO8859-1
    T}
    T{
    Charter Italic 12 pt
    T}	T{
    -Bitstream-Charter-Medium-I-Normal--12-120-75-75-P-66-ISO8859-1
    T}
    Courier 8 pt	-Adobe-Courier-Medium-R-Normal--8-80-75-75-M-50-ISO8859-1
    Courier 10 pt	-Adobe-Courier-Medium-R-Normal--10-100-75-75-M-60-ISO8859-1
    Courier 12 pt	-Adobe-Courier-Medium-R-Normal--12-120-75-75-M-70-ISO8859-1
    Courier 24 pt	-Adobe-Courier-Medium-R-Normal--24-240-75-75-M-150-ISO8859-1
    T{
    Courier Bold 10 pt
    T}	T{
    -Adobe-Courier-Bold-R-Normal--10-100-75-75-M-60-ISO8859-1
    T}
    T{
    Courier Bold Oblique 10 pt
    T}	T{
    -Adobe-Courier-Bold-O-Normal--10-100-75-75-M-60-ISO8859-1
    T}
    T{
    Courier Oblique 10 pt
    T}	T{
    -Adobe-Courier-Medium-O-Normal--10-100-75-75-M-60-ISO8859-1
    T}
    .sp 3p
    .ne 2
    \fB100-dpi Fonts\fP
    .sp 3p
    T{
    Symbol 10 pt
    T}	T{
    -Adobe-Symbol-Medium-R-Normal--14-100-100-100-P-85-Adobe-FONTSPECIFIC
    T}
    T{
    Symbol 14 pt
    T}	T{
    -Adobe-Symbol-Medium-R-Normal--20-140-100-100-P-107-Adobe-FONTSPECIFIC
    T}
    T{
    Symbol 18 pt
    T}	T{
    -Adobe-Symbol-Medium-R-Normal--25-180-100-100-P-142-Adobe-FONTSPECIFIC
    T}
    T{
    Symbol 24 pt
    T}	T{
    -Adobe-Symbol-Medium-R-Normal--34-240-100-100-P-191-Adobe-FONTSPECIFIC
    T}
    T{
    Times Bold 10 pt
    T}	T{
    -Adobe-Times-Bold-R-Normal--14-100-100-100-P-76-ISO8859-1
    T}
    T{
    Times Bold Italic 10 pt
    T}	T{
    -Adobe-Times-Bold-I-Normal--14-100-100-100-P-77-ISO8859-1
    T}
    T{
    Times Italic 10 pt
    T}	T{
    -Adobe-Times-Medium-I-Normal--14-100-100-100-P-73-ISO8859-1
    T}
    T{
    Times Roman 10 pt
    T}	T{
    -Adobe-Times-Medium-R-Normal--14-100-100-100-P-74-ISO8859-1
    T}
    _
    .TE
    .NL
    .NH 2
    Font Properties
    .XS
    \*(SN Font Properties
    .XE
    .LP
    All font properties are optional but will generally include the 
    font name fields and, on a font-by-font basis, any other useful font 
    descriptive and use information that may be required to use the font 
    intelligently.
    The XLFD specifies an extensive set of standard X font properties,
    their interpretation, and fallback rules when the property is not defined 
    for a given font.
    The goal is to provide client applications with enough font information 
    to be able to make automatic formatting and display decisions 
    with good typographic results.
    .LP
    Font property names use the ISO 8859-1 encoding.
    .LP
    Additional standard X font property definitions may be defined in the 
    future and private properties may exist in X fonts at any time.
    Private font properties should be defined to conform to the general mechanism 
    defined in the X protocol to prevent overlap of name space and ambiguous 
    property names, that is, private font property names are of the form: 
    \*Q_\*U (LOW LINE), 
    followed by the organizational identifier, followed by \*Q_\*U (LOW LINE), 
    and terminated with the property name.
    .LP
    The Backus-Naur Form syntax description of X font properties is as follows:
    .IN "Font Properties" "BNF Syntax"
    .SM
    .TS
    rw(1.5i) lw(3.75i).
    .sp 6p
    Properties ::=	OptFontPropList
    OptFontPropList ::=	NULL | OptFontProp OptFontPropList
    OptFontProp ::=	PrivateFontProp | XFontProp
    PrivateFontProp ::=	T{
    STRING8 | Underscore OrganizationId Underscore STRING8
    T}
    XFontProp ::=	T{
    FOUNDRY | FAMILY_NAME | WEIGHT_NAME | SLANT | SETWIDTH_NAME | ADD_STYLE_NAME 
    | PIXEL_SIZE | POINT_SIZE | RESOLUTION_X | RESOLUTION_Y | SPACING | 
    AVERAGE_WIDTH | CHARSET_REGISTRY | CHARSET_ENCODING | QUAD_WIDTH | 
    RESOLUTION | MIN_SPACE | NORM_SPACE | MAX_SPACE | END_SPACE | SUPERSCRIPT_X | 
    SUPERSCRIPT_Y | SUBSCRIPT_X | SUBSCRIPT_Y | UNDERLINE_POSITION | 
    UNDERLINE_THICKNESS | STRIKEOUT_ASCENT | STRIKEOUT_DESCENT | ITALIC_ANGLE 
    | X_HEIGHT | WEIGHT | FACE_NAME |
    FULL_NAME | FONT |
    COPYRIGHT | AVG_CAPITAL_WIDTH | 
    AVG_LOWERCASE_WIDTH | RELATIVE_SETWIDTH | RELATIVE_WEIGHT | CAP_HEIGHT | 
    SUPERSCRIPT_ SIZE | FIGURE_WIDTH | SUBSCRIPT_SIZE | SMALL_CAP_SIZE | 
    NOTICE | DESTINATION
    | FONT_TYPE | FONT_VERSION | RASTERIZER_NAME | RASTERIZER_VERSION |
    RAW_ASCENT | RAW_DESCENT | RAW_* | AXIS_NAMES | AXIS_LIMITS |
    AXIS_TYPES
    T}
    Underscore ::=	OCTET\-\*Q_\*U (LOW LINE)
    OrganizationId ::=	T{
    STRING8\-the registered name of the organization
    T}
    .TE
    .NL
    .NH 3
    FOUNDRY
    .XS
    \*(SN FOUNDRY
    .XE
    .LP
    FOUNDRY is as defined in the
    .PN FontName 
    except that the property type is ATOM.
    .LP
    FOUNDRY cannot be calculated or defaulted if not supplied as a font property.
    .NH 3
    FAMILY_NAME
    .XS
    \*(SN FAMILY_NAME
    .XE
    .LP
    FAMILY_NAME is as defined in the 
    .PN FontName
    except that the property type is ATOM.
    .LP
    FAMILY_NAME cannot be calculated or defaulted if not supplied as a font 
    property.
    .NH 3
    WEIGHT_NAME
    .XS
    \*(SN WEIGHT_NAME
    .XE
    .LP
    WEIGHT_NAME is as defined in the 
    .PN FontName
    except that the property type is ATOM.
    .LP
    WEIGHT_NAME can be defaulted if not supplied as a font property, as follows:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (WEIGHT_NAME undefined) then 
       WEIGHT_NAME = ATOM(\*QMedium\*U)
    .DE
    .NH 3
    SLANT
    .XS
    \*(SN SLANT
    .XE
    .LP
    SLANT is as defined in the 
    .PN FontName
    except that the property type is ATOM.
    .LP
    SLANT can be defaulted if not supplied as a font property, as follows:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (SLANT undefined) then 
       SLANT = ATOM(\*QR\*U)
    .DE
    .NH 3
    SETWIDTH_NAME
    .XS
    \*(SN SETWIDTH_NAME
    .XE
    .LP
    SETWIDTH_NAME is as defined in the 
    .PN FontName
    except that the property type is ATOM.
    .LP
    SETWIDTH_NAME can be defaulted if not supplied as a font property, as follows:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (SETWIDTH_NAME undefined) then
       SETWIDTH_NAME = ATOM(\*QNormal\*U)
    .DE
    .NH 3
    ADD_STYLE_NAME
    .XS
    \*(SN ADD_STYLE_NAME
    .XE
    .LP
    ADD_STYLE_NAME is as defined in the 
    .PN FontName
    except that the property type is ATOM.
    .LP
    ADD_STYLE_NAME can be defaulted if not supplied as a font property, as follows:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (ADD_STYLE_NAME undefined) then
       ADD_STYLE_NAME = ATOM(\*Q\*U)
    .DE
    .NH 3
    PIXEL_SIZE
    .XS
    \*(SN PIXEL_SIZE
    .XE
    .LP
    PIXEL_SIZE is as defined in the 
    .PN FontName
    except that the property type is INT32.
    .LP
    X clients requiring pixel values for the various typographic fixed 
    spaces (em space, en space, and thin space) can use the following 
    algorithm for computing these values from other properties specified 
    for a font:
    .LP
    .DS
    DeciPointsPerInch = 722.7
    EMspace = ROUND ((RESOLUTION_X * POINT_SIZE) / DeciPointsPerInch)
    ENspace = ROUND (EMspace / 2)
    THINspace = ROUND (EMspace / 3)\fP
    .DE
    .LP
    where a slash (\^/\^) denotes real division, 
    an asterisk (\^*\^) denotes real multiplication,
    and ROUND denotes a function that rounds its real argument
    \fIa\fP up or down
    to the next integer.
    This rounding is done according to X = FLOOR (\fIa\fP + 0.5),
    where FLOOR is a function that rounds its real argument down to the
    nearest integer.
    .LP
    PIXEL_SIZE can be approximated if not supplied as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    DeciPointsPerInch = 722.7
    if (PIXEL_SIZE undefined) then
       PIXEL_SIZE = ROUND ((RESOLUTION_Y * POINT_SIZE) / DeciPointsPerInch)
    .DE
    .NH 3
    POINT_SIZE
    .XS
    \*(SN POINT_SIZE
    .XE
    .LP
    POINT_SIZE is as defined in the 
    .PN FontName
    except that the property type is INT32.
    .LP
    X clients requiring device-independent values for em space, 
    en space, and thin space can use the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS I
    EMspace = ROUND (POINT_SIZE / 10)
    ENspace = ROUND (POINT_SIZE / 20)
    THINspace = ROUND (POINT_SIZE / 30)
    .DE
    .LP
    Design POINT_SIZE cannot be calculated or approximated.
    .NH 3
    RESOLUTION_X
    .XS
    \*(SN RESOLUTION_X
    .XE
    .LP
    RESOLUTION_X is as defined in the 
    .PN FontName
    except that the property type is CARD32.
    .LP
    RESOLUTION_X cannot be calculated or approximated.
    .NH 3
    RESOLUTION_Y
    .XS
    \*(SN RESOLUTION_Y
    .XE
    .LP
    RESOLUTION_Y is as defined in the 
    .PN FontName 
    except that the property type is CARD32.
    .LP
    RESOLUTION_X cannot be calculated or approximated.
    .NH 3
    SPACING
    .XS
    \*(SN SPACING
    .XE
    .LP
    SPACING is as defined in the 
    .PN FontName
    except that the property type is ATOM.
    .LP
    SPACING can be calculated if not supplied as a font property, 
    according to the definitions given above for the 
    .PN FontName .
    .NH 3
    AVERAGE_WIDTH
    .XS
    \*(SN AVERAGE_WIDTH
    .XE
    .LP
    AVERAGE_WIDTH is as defined in the 
    .PN FontName
    except that the property type is INT32.
    .LP
    AVERAGE_WIDTH can be calculated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (AVERAGE_WIDTH undefined) then
       AVERAGE_WIDTH = ROUND (MEAN (ABS (width of each glyph in font)) * 10)
    	* (if (dominant writing direction L-to-R) then 1 else \-1)
    .DE
    .LP
    where MEAN is a function that returns the arithmetic mean of its arguments.
    .LP
    X clients that require values for the number of characters per inch (pitch) 
    of a monospaced font can use the following algorithm using the 
    AVERAGE_WIDTH and RESOLUTION_X font properties:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (SPACING not proportional) then
       CharPitch = (RESOLUTION_X * 10) / AVERAGE_WIDTH
    .DE
    .NH 3
    CHARSET_REGISTRY
    .XS
    \*(SN CHARSET_REGISTRY
    .XE
    .LP
    CHARSET_REGISTRY is as defined in the 
    .PN FontName
    except that the property type is ATOM.
    .LP
    CHARSET_REGISTRY cannot be defaulted if not supplied as a font property.
    .NH 3
    CHARSET_ENCODING
    .XS
    \*(SN CHARSET_ENCODING
    .XE
    .LP
    CHARSET_ENCODING is as defined in the 
    .PN FontName
    except that the property type is ATOM.
    .LP
    CHARSET_ENCODING cannot be defaulted if not supplied as a font property.
    .NH 3
    MIN_SPACE
    .XS
    \*(SN MIN_SPACE
    .XE
    .LP
    MIN_SPACE is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the recommended minimum word-space value to be used with this font.
    .LP
    MIN_SPACE can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS I
    if (MIN_SPACE undefined) then
       MIN_SPACE = ROUND(0.75 * NORM_SPACE)
    .DE
    .NH 3
    NORM_SPACE
    .XS
    \*(SN NORM_SPACE
    .XE
    .LP
    NORM_SPACE is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the recommended normal word-space value to be used with this font.
    .LP
    NORM_SPACE can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS 0
    DeciPointsPerInch = 722.7
    if (NORM_SPACE undefined) then
       if (SPACE glyph exists) then
          NORM_SPACE = width of SPACE
       else NORM_SPACE = ROUND((0.33 * RESOLUTION_X * POINT_SIZE)/ DeciPointsPerInch)
    .DE
    .NH 3
    MAX_SPACE
    .XS
    \*(SN MAX_SPACE
    .XE
    .LP
    MAX_SPACE is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the recommended maximum word-space value to be used with this font.
    .LP
    MAX_SPACE can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (MAX_SPACE undefined) then
       MAX_SPACE = ROUND(1.5 * NORM_SPACE)
    .DE
    .NH 3
    END_SPACE
    .XS
    \*(SN END_SPACE
    .XE
    .LP
    END_SPACE is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the recommended spacing at the end of sentences.
    .LP
    END_SPACE can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS 
    if (END_SPACE undefined) then
       END_SPACE = NORM_SPACE
    .DE
    .NH 3
    AVG_CAPITAL_WIDTH 
    .XS
    \*(SN AVG_CAPITAL_WIDTH
    .XE
    .LP
    AVG_CAPITAL_WIDTH is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the unweighted arithmetic mean of the absolute value of the
    width of each capital glyph in the font, in tenths of pixels,
    multiplied by \-1 if the dominant
    writing direction for the font is right-to-left.
    This property applies to both Latin and non-Latin fonts.
    For Latin fonts, 
    capitals are the glyphs A through Z.
    This property is usually used for font matching or substitution.
    .LP
    AVG_CAPITAL_WIDTH can be calculated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS I
    if (AVG_CAPITAL_WIDTH undefined) then
       if (capitals exist) then
          AVG_CAPITAL_WIDTH = ROUND (MEAN
    		     (ABS (width of each capital glyph)) * 10)
    	   * (if (dominant writing direction L-to-R) then 1 else \-1)
       else AVG_CAPITAL_WIDTH undefined
    .DE
    .NH 3
    AVG_LOWERCASE_WIDTH
    .XS
    \*(SN AVG_LOWERCASE_WIDTH
    .XE
    .LP
    AVG_LOWERCASE_WIDTH is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the unweighted arithmetic mean width of the absolute value
    of the width of each lowercase glyph in the font in tenths of pixels,
    multiplied by \-1 if the dominant
    writing direction for the font is right-to-left.
    For Latin fonts, 
    lowercase are the glyphs a through z.
    This property is usually used for font matching or substitution.
    .LP
    Where appropriate, 
    AVG_LOWERCASE_WIDTH can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (AVG_LOWERCASE_WIDTH undefined) then
       if (lowercase exists) then
          AVG_LOWERCASE_WIDTH = ROUND (MEAN
                           (ABS (width of each lowercase glyph)) * 10)
    	* (if (dominant writing direction L-to-R) then 1 else \-1)
       else AVG_LOWERCASE_WIDTH undefined
    .DE
    .NH 3
    QUAD_WIDTH 
    .XS
    \*(SN QUAD_WIDTH
    .XE
    .LP
    QUAD_WIDTH is an integer typographic metric (of type INT32) 
    that gives the width of a quad (em) space.
    .NT Note
    Because all typographic fixed spaces (em, en, and thin) are constant 
    for a given font size (that is, they do not vary according to setwidth),
    the use of this font property has been deprecated.
    X clients that require typographic fixed space values are encouraged 
    to discontinue use of QUAD_WIDTH and compute these values 
    from other font properties (for example, PIXEL_SIZE).
    X clients that require  a font-dependent width value should use either 
    the FIGURE_WIDTH or one of the average character width font properties
    (AVERAGE_WIDTH, AVG_CAPITAL_WIDTH or AVG_LOWERCASE_WIDTH).
    .NE
    .NH 3
    FIGURE_WIDTH
    .XS
    \*(SN FIGURE_WIDTH
    .XE
    .LP
    FIGURE_WIDTH is an integer typographic metric (of type INT32)
    that gives the width of the tabular figures and the dollar sign,
    if suitable for tabular setting (all widths equal).
    For Latin fonts, these tabular figures are the Arabic numerals 0 through 9.
    .LP
    FIGURE_WIDTH can be approximated if not supplied as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS I
    if (numerals and DOLLAR sign are defined & widths are equal) then
       FIGURE_WIDTH = width of DOLLAR
    else FIGURE_WIDTH property undefined
    .DE
    .NH 3
    SUPERSCRIPT_X 
    .XS
    \*(SN SUPERSCRIPT_X
    .XE
    .LP
    SUPERSCRIPT_X is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the recommended horizontal offset in pixels 
    from the position point to the X origin of synthetic superscript text.
    If the current position point is at [X,Y], 
    then superscripts should begin at [X + SUPERSCRIPT_X, Y \- SUPERSCRIPT_Y].
    .LP
    SUPERSCRIPT_X can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (SUPERSCRIPT_X undefined) then
       if (TANGENT(ITALIC_ANGLE) defined) then
          SUPERSCRIPT_X = ROUND((0.40 * CAP_HEIGHT) / TANGENT(ITALIC_ANGLE))
       else SUPERSCRIPT_X = ROUND(0.40 * CAP_HEIGHT)
    .DE
    .LP
    where TANGENT is a trigonometric function that returns the tangent of 
    its argument, which is in 1/64 degrees.
    .NH 3
    SUPERSCRIPT_Y
    .XS
    \*(SN SUPERSCRIPT_Y
    .XE
    .LP
    SUPERSCRIPT_Y is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the recommended vertical offset in pixels 
    from the position point to the Y origin of synthetic superscript text.
    If the current position point is at [X,Y], 
    then superscripts should begin at [X + SUPERSCRIPT_X, Y \- SUPERSCRIPT_Y].
    .LP
    SUPERSCRIPT_Y can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (SUPERSCRIPT_Y undefined) then
       SUPERSCRIPT_Y = ROUND(0.40 * CAP_HEIGHT)
    .DE
    .NH 3
    SUBSCRIPT_X
    .XS
    \*(SN SUBSCRIPT_X
    .XE
    .LP
    SUBSCRIPT_X is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the recommended horizontal offset in pixels 
    from the position point to the X origin of synthetic subscript text.
    If the current position point is at [X,Y], 
    then subscripts should begin at [X + SUBSCRIPT_X, Y + SUBSCRIPT_Y].
    .LP
    SUBSCRIPT_X can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (SUBSCRIPT_X undefined) then
       if (TANGENT(ITALIC_ANGLE) defined) then
          SUBSCRIPT_X = ROUND((0.40 * CAP_HEIGHT) / TANGENT(ITALIC_ANGLE))
       else SUBSCRIPT_X = ROUND(0.40 * CAP_HEIGHT)
    .DE
    .NH 3
    SUBSCRIPT_Y 
    .XS
    \*(SN SUBSCRIPT_Y
    .XE
    .LP
    SUBSCRIPT_Y is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the recommended vertical offset in pixels 
    from the position point to the Y origin of synthetic subscript text.
    If the current position point is at [X,Y], 
    then subscripts should begin at [X + SUBSCRIPT_X, Y + SUBSCRIPT_Y].
    .LP
    SUBSCRIPT_Y can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (SUBSCRIPT_Y undefined) then
       SUBSCRIPT_Y = ROUND(0.40 * CAP_HEIGHT)
    .DE
    .NH 3
    SUPERSCRIPT_SIZE 
    .XS
    \*(SN SUPERSCRIPT_SIZE
    .XE
    .LP
    SUPERSCRIPT_SIZE is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the recommended body size of synthetic superscripts 
    to be used with this font, in pixels.
    This will generally be smaller than the size of the current font;
    that is, superscripts are imaged from a smaller font
    offset according to SUPERSCRIPT_X and SUPERSCRIPT_Y.
    .LP
    SUPERSCRIPT_SIZE can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (SUPERSCRIPT_SIZE undefined) then
       SUPERSCRIPT_SIZE = ROUND(0.60 * PIXEL_SIZE)
    .DE
    .NH 3
    SUBSCRIPT_SIZE
    .XS
    \*(SN SUBSCRIPT_SIZE
    .XE
    .LP
    SUBSCRIPT_SIZE is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the recommended body size of synthetic subscripts 
    to be used with this font, in pixels.
    As with SUPERSCRIPT_SIZE, 
    this will generally be smaller than the size of the current font; 
    that is, subscripts are imaged from a smaller 
    font offset according to SUBSCRIPT_X and SUBSCRIPT_Y.
    .LP
    SUBSCRIPT_SIZE can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (SUBSCRIPT_SIZE undefined) then
       SUBSCRIPT_SIZE = ROUND(0.60 * PIXEL_SIZE)
    .DE
    .NH 3
    SMALL_CAP_SIZE
    .XS
    \*(SN SMALL_CAP_SIZE
    .XE
    .LP
    SMALL_CAP_SIZE is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the recommended body size of synthetic small capitals 
    to be used with this font, in pixels.
    Small capitals are generally imaged from a smaller font 
    of slightly more weight.
    No offset [X,Y] is necessary.
    .LP
    SMALL_CAP_SIZE can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (SMALL_CAP_SIZE undefined) then
       SMALL_CAP_SIZE = ROUND(PIXEL_SIZE * ((X_HEIGHT 
                                  + ((CAP_HEIGHT \- X_HEIGHT) / 3)) / CAP_HEIGHT))
    .DE
    .NH 3
    UNDERLINE_POSITION
    .XS
    \*(SN UNDERLINE_POSITION
    .XE
    .LP
    UNDERLINE_POSITION is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the recommended vertical offset in pixels
    from the baseline to the top of the underline.
    If the current position point is at [X,Y], 
    the top of the baseline is given by [X, Y + UNDERLINE_POSITION].
    .LP
    UNDERLINE_POSITION can be approximated if not provided as a font 
    property, according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (UNDERLINE_POSITION undefined) then
       UNDERLINE_POSITION = ROUND((maximum descent) / 2)
    .DE
    where \fImaximum descent\fP is the maximum descent (below the baseline)
    in pixels of any glyph in the font.
    .NH 3
    UNDERLINE_THICKNESS 
    .XS
    \*(SN UNDERLINE_THICKNESS
    .XE
    .LP
    UNDERLINE_THICKNESS is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the recommended underline thickness, in pixels.
    .LP
    UNDERLINE_THICKNESS can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    CapStemWidth = average width of the stems of capitals
    if (UNDERLINE_THICKNESS undefined) then
       UNDERLINE_THICKNESS = CapStemWidth
    .DE
    .NH 3
    STRIKEOUT_ASCENT
    .XS
    \*(SN STRIKEOUT_ASCENT
    .XE
    .LP
    STRIKEOUT_ASCENT is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the vertical ascent for boxing or voiding glyphs in this font.
    If the current position is at [X,Y] and the string extent is EXTENT, 
    the upper-left corner of the strikeout box is at [X, Y \- STRIKEOUT_ASCENT] 
    and the lower-right corner of the box is at [X + EXTENT, Y + STRIKEOUT_DESCENT].
    .LP
    STRIKEOUT_ASCENT can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (STRIKEOUT_ASCENT undefined)
       STRIKEOUT_ASCENT = maximum ascent
    .DE
    where \fImaximum ascent\fP is the maximum ascent (above the baseline)
    in pixels of any glyph in the font.
    .NH 3
    STRIKEOUT_DESCENT
    .XS
    \*(SN STRIKEOUT_DESCENT
    .XE
    .LP
    STRIKEOUT_DESCENT is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the vertical descent for boxing or voiding glyphs in this font.
    If the current position is at [X,Y] and the string extent is EXTENT,
    the upper-left corner of the strikeout box is at [X, Y \- STRIKEOUT_ASCENT] 
    and the lower-right corner of the box is at [X + EXTENT, Y + STRIKEOUT_DESCENT].
    .LP
    STRIKEOUT_DESCENT can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (STRIKEOUT_DESCENT undefined)
       STRIKEOUT_DESCENT = maximum descent
    .DE
    where \fImaximum descent\fP is the maximum descent (below the baseline)
    in pixels of any glyph in the font.
    .NH 3
    ITALIC_ANGLE
    .XS
    \*(SN ITALIC_ANGLE
    .XE
    .LP
    ITALIC_ANGLE is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the nominal posture angle of the typeface design, in 1/64 degrees, 
    measured from the glyph origin counterclockwise from the three o'clock position.
    .LP
    ITALIC_ANGLE can be defaulted if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (ITALIC_ANGLE undefined) then
       ITALIC_ANGLE = (90 * 64)
    .DE
    .NH 3
    CAP_HEIGHT 
    .XS
    \*(SN CAP_HEIGHT
    .XE
    .LP
    CAP_HEIGHT is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the nominal height of the capital letters contained in the font, 
    as specified by the FOUNDRY or typeface designer.
    .LP
    Certain clients require CAP_HEIGHT to compute scale factors and 
    positioning offsets for synthesized glyphs where this 
    information or designed glyphs are not explicitly provided by the font 
    (for example, small capitals, superiors, inferiors, and so on).
    CAP_HEIGHT is also a critical factor in font matching and substitution.
    .LP
    CAP_HEIGHT can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (CAP_HEIGHT undefined) then
       if (Latin font) then
          CAP_HEIGHT = XCharStruct.ascent[glyph X]
       else if (capitals exist) then
           CAP_HEIGHT = XCharStruct.ascent[some unaccented capital glyph]
       else CAP_HEIGHT undefined
    .DE
    .NH 3
    X_HEIGHT
    .XS
    \*(SN X_HEIGHT
    .XE
    .LP
    X_HEIGHT is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the nominal height above the baseline of the lowercase glyphs 
    contained in the font, 
    as specified by the FOUNDRY or typeface designer.
    .LP
    As with CAP_HEIGHT, 
    X_HEIGHT is required by certain clients to compute scale factors 
    for synthesized small capitals where this information is not explicitly 
    provided by the font resource.
    X_HEIGHT is a critical factor in font matching and substitution.
    .LP
    X_HEIGHT can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS I
    if (X_HEIGHT undefined) then
       if (Latin font) then
          X_HEIGHT = XCharStruct.ascent[glyph x]
       else if (lowercase exists) then
            X_HEIGHT = XCharStruct.ascent[some unaccented lc glyph without an ascender]
       else X_HEIGHT undefined
    .DE
    .NH 3
    RELATIVE_SETWIDTH
    .XS
    \*(SN RELATIVE_SETWIDTH
    .XE
    .LP
    RELATIVE_SETWIDTH is an unsigned integer value (of type CARD32)
    that gives the coded proportionate width of the font,
    relative to all known fonts of the same typeface family, 
    according to the type designer's or FOUNDRY's judgment.
    .LP
    RELATIVE_SETWIDTH ranges from 10 to 90 or is 0 if undefined or unknown.
    The following reference values are defined:
    .TS H
    lw(.5i) lw(1i) lw(2.75i).
    _
    .sp 6p
    .B
    Code	English Translation	Description
    .sp 6p
    _
    .sp 6p
    .TH
    .R
    0	Undefined	Undefined or unknown
    10	UltraCondensed	The lowest ratio of average width to height
    20	ExtraCondensed
    30	Condensed	Condensed, Narrow, Compressed, ...
    40	SemiCondensed
    50	Medium	Medium, Normal, Regular, ...
    60	SemiExpanded	SemiExpanded, DemiExpanded, ...
    70	Expanded
    80	ExtraExpanded	ExtraExpanded, Wide, ...
    90	UltraExpanded	The highest ratio of average width to height
    .sp 6p
    _
    .TE
    .LP
    RELATIVE_SETWIDTH can be defaulted if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (RELATIVE_SETWIDTH undefined) then
       RELATIVE_SETWIDTH = 50
    .DE
    .LP
    For polymorphic fonts, RELATIVE_SETWIDTH is not necessarily a
    linear function of the font's setwidth axis.
    .LP
    X clients that want to obtain a calculated proportionate width of the 
    font (that is, a font-independent way of identifying the proportionate 
    width across all fonts and all font vendors) can use the following algorithm: 
    .LP
    .DS
    SETWIDTH = AVG_CAPITAL_WIDTH / (CAP_HEIGHT * 10)
    .DE
    .LP
    where SETWIDTH is a real number with zero being the narrowest 
    calculated setwidth.
    .NH 3
    RELATIVE_WEIGHT
    .XS
    \*(SN RELATIVE_WEIGHT
    .XE
    .LP
    RELATIVE_WEIGHT is an unsigned integer value (of type CARD32)
    that gives the coded weight of the font, 
    relative to all known fonts of the same typeface family, 
    according to the type designer's or FOUNDRY's judgment.
    .LP
    RELATIVE_WEIGHT ranges from 10 to 90 or is 0 if undefined or unknown.
    The following reference values are defined:
    .TS H
    lw(.5i) lw(1i) lw(3.75i).
    _
    .sp 6p
    .B
    Code	English Translation	Description
    .sp 6p
    _
    .sp 6p
    .TH
    .R
    0	Undefined	Undefined or unknown
    10	UltraLight	The lowest ratio of stem width to height
    20	ExtraLight
    30	Light
    40	SemiLight	SemiLight, Book, ...
    50	Medium	Medium, Normal, Regular,...
    60	SemiBold	SemiBold, DemiBold, ...
    70	Bold
    80	ExtraBold	ExtraBold, Heavy, ...
    90	UltraBold	T{
    UltraBold, Black, ..., the highest ratio of stem width to height
    T}
    .sp 6p
    _
    .TE
    .LP
    RELATIVE_WEIGHT can be defaulted if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (RELATIVE_WEIGHT undefined) then
       RELATIVE_WEIGHT = 50
    .DE
    .LP
    For polymorphic fonts, RELATIVE_WEIGHT is not necessarily a
    linear function of the font's weight axis.
    .NH 3 
    WEIGHT
    .XS
    \*(SN WEIGHT
    .XE
    .LP
    Calculated WEIGHT is an unsigned integer value (of type CARD32)
    that gives the calculated weight of the font, 
    computed as the ratio of capital stem width to CAP_HEIGHT, 
    in the range 0 to 1000, where 0 is the lightest weight.
    .LP
    WEIGHT can be calculated if not supplied as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    CapStemWidth = average width of the stems of capitals
    if (WEIGHT undefined) then
       WEIGHT = ROUND ((CapStemWidth * 1000) / CAP_HEIGHT)
    .DE
    .LP
    A calculated value for weight is necessary when matching fonts from 
    different families because both the RELATIVE_WEIGHT and the WEIGHT_NAME are 
    assigned by the typeface supplier, according to its tradition and practice, 
    and therefore, are somewhat subjective.
    Calculated WEIGHT provides a font-independent way of identifying 
    the weight across all fonts and all font vendors.
    .NH 3
    RESOLUTION 
    .XS
    \*(SN RESOLUTION 
    .XE
    .LP
    RESOLUTION is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the resolution for which this font was created,
    measured in 1/100 pixels per point.
    .NT Note
    As independent horizontal and vertical design resolution components
    are required to accommodate displays with nonsquare aspect ratios,
    the use of this font property has been deprecated,
    and independent RESOLUTION_X and RESOLUTION_Y font name fields/properties 
    have been defined (see sections 3.1.2.9 and 3.1.2.10).
    X clients are encouraged to discontinue use of the RESOLUTION property
    and are encouraged to use the appropriate X,Y resolution properties,
    as required.
    .NE                     \" Note End
    .NH 3
    FONT
    .XS
    \*(SN FONT
    .XE
    .LP
    FONT is a string (of type ATOM) that gives the full XLFD name of the
    font\*-that is, the value can be used to open another
    instance of the same font.
    .LP
    If not provided, the FONT property cannot be calculated.
    .NH 3
    FACE_NAME 
    .XS
    \*(SN FACE_NAME
    .XE
    .LP
    FACE_NAME is a human-understandable string (of type ATOM)
    that gives the full device-independent typeface name, 
    including the owner, weight, slant, set, and so on 
    but not the resolution, size, and so on.
    This property may be used as feedback during font selection.
    .LP
    FACE_NAME cannot be calculated or approximated if not provided as a font 
    property.
    .NH 3
    FULL_NAME
    .XS
    \*(SN FULL_NAME
    .XE
    .LP
    FULL_NAME is the same as FACE_NAME.
    Its use is deprecated, but it is found on some old fonts.
    .NH 3
    COPYRIGHT 
    .XS
    \*(SN COPYRIGHT
    .XE
    .LP
    COPYRIGHT is a human-understandable string (of type ATOM)
    that gives the copyright information of the legal owner 
    of the digital font data.
    .LP
    This information is a required component of a font
    but is independent of the particular format used to represent it 
    (that is, it cannot be captured as a comment that could later 
    be thrown away for efficiency reasons).
    .LP
    COPYRIGHT cannot be calculated or approximated if not provided as a font 
    property.
    .NH 3
    NOTICE
    .XS
    \*(SN NOTICE
    .XE
    .LP
    NOTICE is a human-understandable string (of type ATOM)
    that gives the copyright information of the legal owner of the font design
    or, if not applicable, the trademark information for the typeface FAMILY_NAME.
    .LP
    Typeface design and trademark protection laws vary from country to country, 
    the USA having no design copyright protection currently
    while various countries in Europe offer both design and typeface family name 
    trademark protection.
    As with COPYRIGHT, 
    this information is a required component of a font 
    but is independent of the particular format used to represent it.
    .LP
    NOTICE cannot be calculated or approximated if not provided as a font property.
    .NH 3
    DESTINATION 
    .XS
    \*(SN DESTINATION
    .XE
    .LP
    DESTINATION is an unsigned integer code (of type CARD32)
    that gives the font design destination, 
    that is, whether it was designed as a screen proofing font to match 
    printer font glyph widths (WYSIWYG), as an optimal video font (possibly with 
    corresponding printer font) for extended screen viewing (video text), and so on.
    .LP
    The font design considerations are very different, 
    and at current display resolutions, 
    the readability and legibility of these two kinds of screen fonts 
    are very different.
    DESTINATION allows publishing clients that use X to model the printed page
    and video text clients, such as on-line documentation browsers, 
    to query for X screen fonts that suit their particular requirements.
    .LP
    The encoding is as follows:
    .TS H
    lw(.5i) lw(1i) lw(3.75i).
    _
    .sp 6p
    .B
    Code	English Translation	Description
    .sp 6p
    _
    .sp 6p
    .TH
    .R
    0	WYSIWYG	T{
    The font is optimized to match the typographic design and metrics of an 
    equivalent printer font.
    T}
    1	Video text	T{
    The font is optimized for screen legibility and readability.
    T}
    .sp 6p
    _
    .TE
    
    .NH 3
    FONT_TYPE
    .XS
    \*(SN FONT_TYPE
    .XE
    .LP
    FONT_TYPE is a human-understandable string (of type ATOM) that
    describes the format of
    the font data as they are read from permanent storage by the current font source.
    It is a static attribute of the source data.  It can be used
    by clients to select a type of bitmap or outline font
    without regard to the rasterizer used to render the font.
    .LP
    Predefined values are as follows:
    .TS H
    l lw(5i).
    _
    .sp 6p
    .B
    Value	When applicable
    .sp 6p
    _
    .sp 6p
    .TH
    .R
    \*QBitmap\*U	T{
    Hand-tuned bitmap fonts.  Some
    attempt has been made to optimize
    the visual appearance of the font
    for the requested size and
    resolution.
    T}
    \*QPrebuilt\*U	T{
    All bitmap format fonts that
    cannot be described as \*QBitmap\*U,
    that is, hand-tuned.  For example,
    a bitmap format font that was
    generated mechanically using a
    scalable font rasterizer
    would be considered \*QPrebuilt\*U, not \*QBitmap\*U.
    T}
    \*QType 1\*U	Any Type 1 font.
    \*QTrueType\*U	Any TrueType font.
    \*QSpeedo\*U	Any Speedo font.
    \*QF3\*U	Any F3 font.
    .sp 6p
    _
    .TE
    .LP
    Other values may be registered with the X Consortium.
    .NH 3
    FONT_VERSION
    .XS
    \*(SN FONT_VERSION
    .XE
    .LP
    FONT_VERSION is a human-understandable string (of type ATOM)
    that describes the formal or informal version of the font.
    \fBNone\fP is a valid value.
    .NH 3
    RASTERIZER_NAME
    .XS
    \*(SN RASTERIZER_NAME
    .XE
    .LP
    RASTERIZER_NAME is a human-understandable string (of type ATOM)
    that is the specific name of the
    rasterizer that has performed some rasterization operation
    (such as scaling from outlines) on this font.
    .LP
    To define a RASTERIZER_NAME, the following format is
    recommended:
    .SM
    .TS
    rw(1.5i) lw(3.75i).
    RasterizerName ::=	OrganizationId Space Rasterizer
    OrganizationId ::=	T{
    STRING8\*-the X Registry ORGANIZATION name
    of the rasterizer implementor or maintainer.
    T}
    Rasterizer ::=	T{
    the case-sensitive, human-understandable product name
    of the rasterizer.  Words within this
    name should be separated by a single SPACE.
    T}
    Space ::=	OCTET\-\*Q\0\*U (SPACE)
    .TE
    .NL
    .LP
    Examples:
    .nf
    		X Consortium Bit Scaler
    		X Consortium Type 1 Rasterizer
    		X Consortium Speedo Rasterizer
    		Adobe Type Manager
    		Sun TypeScaler
    .fi
    .LP
    If RASTERIZER_NAME is not defined, or is \fBNone\fP, no
    rasterization operation has been applied to the FONT_TYPE.
    .NH 3
    RASTERIZER_VERSION
    .XS
    \*(SN RASTERIZER_VERSION
    .XE
    .LP
    RASTERIZER_VERSION is a human-understandable string (of type
    ATOM) that represents the formal or informal version of a
    font rasterizer.
    The RASTERIZER_VERSION should match the corresponding
    product version number known to users, when applicable.
    .NH 3
    RAW_ASCENT
    .XS
    \*(SN RAW_ASCENT
    .XE
    .LP
    For a font with a transformation matrix, RAW_ASCENT is the font ascent
    in 1000 pixel metrics
    (see section \n(sM.1).
    .NH 3
    RAW_DESCENT
    .XS
    \*(SN RAW_DESCENT
    .XE
    .LP
    For a font with a transformation matrix, RAW_DESCENT is the font
    descent in 1000 pixel metrics
    (see section \n(sM.1).
    .NH 3
    RAW_*
    .XS
    \*(SN RAW_*
    .XE
    .LP
    For a font with a transformation matrix, 
    all font properties that represent horizontal or vertical sizes or
    displacements will be accompanied by a new property, named as the
    original except prefixed with \*QRAW_\*U, that is computed as
    described in section \n(sM.1.
    .NH 3
    AXIS_NAMES
    .XS
    \*(SN AXIS_NAMES
    .XE
    .LP
    AXIS_NAMES is a list of all the
    names of the axes for a polymorphic font, separated by a null (0) byte.
    These names are suitable for presentation in a user interface
    (see section \n(sP).
    .NH 3
    AXIS_LIMITS
    .XS
    \*(SN AXIS_LIMITS
    .XE
    .LP
    AXIS_LIMITS is a list of integers, two for each axis,
    giving the minimum and maximum allowable values for that axis of a
    polymorphic font
    (see section \n(sP).
    .NH 3
    AXIS_TYPES
    .XS
    \*(SN AXIS_TYPES
    .XE
    .LP
    AXIS_TYPES is like AXIS_NAMES,
    but can be registered as having specific semantics
    (see section \n(sP).
    .NH 2
    Built-in Font Property Atoms
    .XS
    \*(SN Built-in Font Property Atoms
    .XE
    .LP
    The following font property atom definitions were predefined in the initial 
    version of the core protocol:
    .TS H
    l l.
    _
    .sp 6p
    .B
    Font Property/Atom Name	Property Type
    .sp 6p
    _
    .sp 6p
    .TH
    .R
    MIN_SPACE	INT32
    NORM_SPACE	INT32
    MAX_SPACE	INT32
    END_SPACE	INT32
    SUPERSCRIPT_X	INT32
    SUPERSCRIPT_Y	INT32
    SUBSCRIPT_X	INT32
    SUBSCRIPT_Y	INT32
    UNDERLINE_POSITION	INT32
    UNDERLINE_THICKNESS	INT32
    STRIKEOUT_ASCENT	INT32
    STRIKEOUT_DESCENT	INT32
    FONT_ASCENT	INT32
    FONT_DESCENT	INT32
    ITALIC_ANGLE	INT32
    X_HEIGHT	INT32
    QUAD_WIDTH	INT32 \- deprecated
    WEIGHT	CARD32
    POINT_SIZE	INT32
    RESOLUTION	CARD32 \- deprecated
    COPYRIGHT	ATOM
    FULL_NAME	ATOM \- deprecated
    FAMILY_NAME	ATOM
    DEFAULT_CHAR	CARD32
    .sp 6p
    _
    .TE
    .br
    .\" section \n(sM
    .NH 1
    Matrix Transformations
    .XS
    \*(SN Matrix Transformations
    .XE
    .LP
    An XLFD name presented to the server can have the POINT_SIZE or PIXEL_SIZE
    field begin with the character \*Q[\*U.  If the first character of the field
    is \*Q[\*U, the character must be followed with ASCII representations of
    four floating point numbers and a trailing \*Q]\*U, with white space
    separating the numbers and optional white space separating the numbers
    from the \*Q[\*U and \*Q]\*U characters.  Numbers use standard floating point
    syntax but use the character \*Q\^~\^\*U to represent a minus sign in the mantissa
    or exponent.
    .LP
    The BNF for a matrix transformation string is as follows:
    .SM
    .TS
    rw(1.5i) l.
    MatrixString ::=	T{
    LeftBracket OptionalSpace Float Space Float Space
    Float Space Float OptionalSpace RightBracket
    T}
    OptionalSpace ::=	\*Q\*U | Space
    Space ::=	SpaceChar | SpaceChar Space
    Float ::=	Mantissa | Mantissa Exponent
    Mantissa ::=	Sign Number | Number
    Sign ::=	Plus | Tilde
    Number ::=	Integer | Integer Dot Integer | Dot Integer
    Integer ::=	Digit | Digit Integer
    Digit ::=	\*Q0\*U | \*Q1\*U | \*Q2\*U | \*Q3\*U | \*Q4\*U | \*Q5\*U | \*Q6\*U | \*Q7\*U | \*Q8\*U | \*Q9\*U
    Exponent ::=	\*Qe\*U SignedInteger | \*QE\*U SignedInteger
    SignedInteger ::=	Sign Integer | Integer
    LeftBracket ::=	OCTET \- \*Q[\*U (LEFT SQUARE BRACKET)
    RightBracket ::=	OCTET \- \*Q]\*U (RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET)
    SpaceChar ::=	OCTET \- \*Q\0\*U (SPACE)
    Tilde ::=	OCTET \- \*Q\^~\^\*U (TILDE)
    Plus ::=	OCTET \- \*Q+\*U (PLUS)
    Dot ::=	OCTET \- \*Q\^.\^\*U (FULL STOP)
    .TE
    .NL
    .LP
    The string \*Q[a b c d]\*U represents a graphical transformation of the glyphs
    in the font by the matrix
    .TS
    c c c c c.
    [	a	b	0	]
    [	c	d	0	]
    [	0	0	1	]
    .TE
    .LP
    All transformations occur around the origin of the glyph.  The
    relationship between the current scalar values and the matrix
    transformation values is that the scalar value \*QN\*U in the POINT_SIZE field
    produces the same glyphs as the matrix \*Q[N/10 0 0 N/10]\*U in that field,
    and the scalar value \*QN\*U in the PIXEL_SIZE field produces the same glyphs
    as the matrix \*Q[N*RESOLUTION_X/RESOLUTION_Y 0 0 N]\*U in that field.
    .LP
    If matrices are specified for both the POINT_SIZE and PIXEL_SIZE, they
    must bear the following relationship to each other within an
    implementation-specific tolerance:
    .br
    	PIXEL_SIZE_MATRIX = [Sx 0 0 Sy] * POINT_SIZE_MATRIX
    .br
    where
    .br
    	Sx = RESOLUTION_X / 72.27
    .br
    	Sy = RESOLUTION_Y / 72.27
    .LP
    If either the POINT_SIZE or PIXEL_SIZE field is unspecified (either \*Q0\*U or
    wildcarded), the preceding formulas can be used to compute one from the
    other.
    .\"
    .NH 2
    Metrics and Font Properties
    .XS
    \*(SN Metrics and Font Properties
    .XE
    .LP
    In this section, the phrase \*Q1000 pixel metrics\*U means the
    metrics that would be obtained if the rasterizer took the base untransformed
    design used to generate the transformed font and scaled it linearly to a
    height of 1000 pixels, with no rotation component.  Note that there may be no
    way for the application to actually request this font since the rasterizer
    may use different outlines or rasterization techniques at that size from the
    ones used to generate the transformed font.
    .LP
    Notes on properties and metrics:
    .LP
    The per-char ink metrics (lbearing, rbearing, ascent, and descent)
    represent the ink extent of the transformed glyph around its origin.
    .LP
    The per-char width is the x component of the transformed character width.
    .LP
    The font ascent and descent are the y component of the transformed font
    ascent or descent.
    .LP
    The FONT property returns a name reflecting the matrix being
    used\*-that is, the name returned can be used to open another
    instance of the same font.  The returned name is not necessarily an
    exact copy of the requested name.  If, for example, the user
    requests
    .br
    .ft C
    .SM
       \-misc\-fixed\-medium\-r\-normal\-\-0\-[2e1 0 0.0 +10.0]\-72\-72\-c\-0\-iso8859\-1
    .NL
    .ft P
    .br
    the resulting FONT property might be
    .br
    .ft C
    .SM
       \-misc\-fixed\-medium\-r\-normal\-\-[19.9 0 0 10]\-[20 0 0 10]\-72\-72\-c\-0\-iso8859\-1
    .NL
    .ft P
    .br
    The FONT property will always include matrices in both the PIXEL_SIZE
    and the POINT_SIZE fields.
    .LP
    To allow accurate client positioning of transformed characters, the
    attributes field of the XCharInfo contains the width of the character in
    1000 pixel metrics.  This attributes field should be interpreted as a signed
    integer.
    .LP
    There will always be 2 new font properties defined, RAW_ASCENT and
    RAW_DESCENT, that hold the ascent and descent in 1000 pixel metrics.
    .LP
    All font properties that represent horizontal widths or displacements
    have as their value the x component of the transformed width or
    displacement.  All font properties that represent vertical heights or
    displacements have as their value the y component of the transformed
    height or displacement.  Each such property will be accompanied by a new
    property, named as the original except prefixed with \*QRAW_\*U, that gives
    the value of the width, height, or displacement in 1000 pixel metrics.
    .NH 1
    Scalable Fonts
    .XS
    \*(SN Scalable Fonts
    .XE
    .LP
    The XLFD is designed to support scalable fonts.  A scalable font is a
    font source from which instances of arbitrary size can be derived.
    A scalable font source might be one or more outlines
    together with zero or more hand-tuned bitmap fonts at specific sizes and
    resolutions, or it might be a programmatic description together with
    zero or more bitmap fonts, or some other format
    (perhaps even just a single bitmap font).
    .LP
    The following definitions are useful for discussing scalable fonts:
    .LP
    \fBWell-formed XLFD pattern\fP
    .IP
    A pattern string containing 14 hyphens, one of which is
    the first character of the pattern.  Wildcard characters are permitted
    in the fields of a well-formed XLFD pattern.
    .LP
    \fBScalable font name\fP
    .IP
    A well-formed XLFD pattern containing no wildcards and containing the
    digit \*Q0\*U in the PIXEL_SIZE, POINT_SIZE, and AVERAGE_WIDTH fields.
    .LP
    \fBScalable fields\fP
    .IP
    The XLFD fields PIXEL_SIZE, POINT_SIZE, RESOLUTION_X,
    RESOLUTION_Y, and AVERAGE_WIDTH.
    .LP
    \fBDerived instance\fP
    .IP
    The result of replacing the scalable fields of a font name
    with values to yield a font name that could actually be
    produced from the font source.  A scaling engine is
    permitted, but not required, to interpret the scalable
    fields in font names to support anamorphic scaling.
    .LP
    \fBGlobal list\fP
    .IP
    The list of names that would be returned by an X server for a
    .PN ListFonts
    protocol request on the pattern \*Q*\*U if there were no protocol
    restrictions on the total number of names returned.
    .sp
    .LP
    The global list consists of font names derived from font sources.
    If a single font source can support multiple character sets (specified
    in the CHARSET_REGISTRY and CHARSET_ENCODING fields), each such character
    set should be used to form a separate font name in the list.
    For a nonscalable font source, the simple font name
    for each character set is included in the global list.
    For a scalable font source, a scalable font name for each character set
    is included in the list.  In addition to the scalable font name,
    specific derived instance names may also be included in the list.
    The relative order of derived instances with respect to the scalable
    font name is not constrained.  Finally, font name aliases may also be included
    in the list.  The relative order of aliases
    with respect to the real font name is not constrained.
    .LP
    The values of the RESOLUTION_X and RESOLUTION_Y fields of a scalable font name
    are implementation dependent,
    but to maximize backward compatibility, they
    should be reasonable nonzero values, for example, a resolution close to that
    provided by the screen (in a single-screen server).
    Because some existing
    applications rely on seeing a collection of point and pixel sizes,
    server vendors are strongly encouraged in the near term to
    provide a mechanism for including, for each scalable font name,
    a set of specific derived instance names.  For font sources that contain
    a collection of hand-tuned bitmap fonts, including names of these instances
    in the global list is recommended and sufficient.
    .LP
    The X protocol request
    .PN OpenFont
    on a scalable font name returns a font corresponding to an
    implementation-dependent derived instance of that font name.
    .LP
    The X protocol request
    .PN ListFonts
    on a well-formed XLFD pattern returns the following.
    Starting with the global list, if the actual pattern argument
    has values containing no wildcards in scalable fields,
    then substitute each such field into the corresponding
    field in each scalable font name in the list.  For each resulting font name,
    if the remaining scalable fields cannot be replaced with values to produce a
    derived instance, remove the font name from the list.  Now take the modified
    list, and perform a simple pattern match against the pattern argument.
    .PN ListFonts
    returns the resulting list.
    .LP
    For example, given the global list:
    .DS
    -Linotype-Times-Bold-I-Normal--0-0-100-100-P-0-ISO8859-1
    -Linotype-Times-Bold-R-Normal--0-0-100-100-P-0-ISO8859-1
    -Linotype-Times-Medium-I-Normal--0-0-100-100-P-0-ISO8859-1
    -Linotype-Times-Medium-R-Normal--0-0-100-100-P-0-ISO8859-1
    .DE
    .LP
    a
    .PN ListFonts
    request with the pattern:
    .LP
    .DS
    -*-Times-*-R-Normal--*-120-100-100-P-*-ISO8859-1
    .DE
    .LP
    would return:
    .DS
    -Linotype-Times-Bold-R-Normal--0-120-100-100-P-0-ISO8859-1
    -Linotype-Times-Medium-R-Normal--0-120-100-100-P-0-ISO8859-1
    .DE
    .LP
    .PN ListFonts
    on a pattern containing wildcards that is not a well-formed XLFD
    pattern is only required to return the list obtained by performing
    a simple pattern match against the global list.
    X servers are permitted, but not required,
    to use a more sophisticated matching algorithm.
    .br
    .\" section \n(sP
    .NH 1
    Polymorphic Fonts
    .XS
    \*(SN Polymorphic Fonts
    .XE
    .LP
    Fonts that can be varied in ways other than size or resolution are called
    \fIpolymorphic fonts.\fP  Multiple Master Type 1 font programs are one type of
    a polymorphic font.  Current examples of axes along which the fonts can be
    varied are width, weight, and optical size; others might include formality
    or x-height.
    .LP
    To support polymorphic fonts, special values indicating variability are
    defined for the following XLFD fields:
    .nf
    	WEIGHT_NAME
    	SLANT
    	SETWIDTH_NAME
    	ADD_STYLE_NAME
    .fi
    .LP
    The string \*Q0\*U is the special polymorphic value.  In the
    WEIGHT_NAME, SLANT, or SETWIDTH_NAME field, \*Q0\*U must be the
    entire field.
    There may be multiple polymorphic values
    in the ADD_STYLE_NAME field.
    They are surrounded by \*Q[\*U and \*Q]\*U and separated by a Space,
    as \*Q[0\00]\*U.  The polymorphic values may coexist with
    other data in the field.
    It is recommended that the polymorphic values
    be at the end of the ADD_STYLE_NAME field.
    .LP
    The font-matching algorithms for a font with polymorphic fields are
    identical to the matching algorithms for a font with scalable fields.
    .LP
    There are three new font properties to describe the axes of variation,
    AXIS_NAMES, AXIS_LIMITS, and AXIS_TYPES.  AXIS_NAMES is a list of all the
    names of the axes for the font, separated by a null (0) byte.
    These names are suitable for presentation in
    a user interface.  AXIS_LIMITS is a list of integers, two for each axis,
    giving the minimum and maximum allowable values for that axis.
    AXIS_TYPES is like AXIS_NAMES,
    but can be registered as having specific semantics.
    .LP
    The axes are listed in the properties in the same order as they
    appear in the font name.  They are matched with font name fields by
    looking for the special polymorphic values in the font name.
    .LP
    Examples:
    .LP
    The Adobe Myriad MM font program has width and weight axes.  Weight can
    vary from 215 to 830, and width from 300 to 700.
    .\" indented display
    .ID
    .SM
    Name:
    .ft C
    	-Adobe-Myriad MM-0-R-0--0-0-0-0-P-0-ISO8859-1
    .ft P
    AXIS_NAMES:
    	Weight, Width
    AXIS_LIMITS:
    	215, 830, 300, 700
    AXIS_TYPES:
    	Adobe-Weight, Adobe-Width
    Sample derived instance:
    .ft C
    	-Adobe-Myriad MM-412-R-575--*-120-100-100-P-*-ISO8859-1
    .ft P
    .NL
    .DE                     \" display end
    .LP
    The Adobe Minion MM Italic font program has width, weight, and optical
    size axes.
    .ID
    .SM
    Name:
    .ft C
    	-Adobe-Minion MM-0-I-0-[0]-0-0-0-0-P-0-ISO8859-1
    .ft P
    AXIS_NAMES:
    	Weight, Width, Optical size
    AXIS_LIMITS:
    	345, 620, 450, 600, 6, 72
    AXIS_TYPES:
    	Adobe-Weight, Adobe-Width, Adobe-OpticalSize
    Sample derived instance:
    .ft C
    	-Adobe-Minion MM-550-I-480-[18]-*-180-100-100-P-*-ISO8859-1
    .ft P
    .NL
    .DE
    .LP
    The Adobe Minion MM Swash Italic font program has the same axes and
    values.  This shows how
    \*Q[0]\*U in the ADD_STYLE_NAME field can
    coexist with other words.
    .ID
    .SM
    Name:
    .ft C
    	-Adobe-Minion MM-0-I-0-Swash[0]-0-0-0-0-P-0-ISO8859-1
    .ft P
    AXIS_NAMES:
    	Weight, Width, Optical size
    AXIS_LIMITS:
    	345, 620, 450, 600, 6, 72
    AXIS_TYPES:
    	Adobe-Weight, Adobe-Width, Adobe-OpticalSize
    Sample derived instance:
    .ft C
    	-Adobe-Minion MM-550-I-480-Swash[18]-*-180-100-100-P-*-ISO8859-1
    .ft P
    .NL
    .DE
    .LP
    The XYZ Abc font, a hypothetical font, has optical size and x-height axes.
    This shows how there can be more than one polymorphic value in the
    ADD_STYLE_NAME field.
    .ID
    .SM
    Name:
    .ft C
    	-XYZ-Abc-Medium-R-Normal-[0 0]-0-0-0-0-P-0-ISO8859-1
    .ft P
    AXIS_NAMES:
    	Optical size, X-height
    AXIS_LIMITS:
    	6, 72, 400, 600
    AXIS_TYPES:
    	XYZ-OpticalSize, XYZ-Xheight
    Sample derived instance:
    .ft C
    	-XYZ-Abc-Medium-R-Normal-[14 510]-*-140-100-100-P-*-ISO8859-1
    .ft P
    .NL
    .DE
    .LP
    If an axis allows negative values, a client requests a negative value by
    using \*Q\^~\^\*U (TILDE) as a minus sign.
    .LP
    Axis types can be registered with the X Consortium, along with their
    semantics.
    .LP
    If a font name that contains the polymorphic value or a wildcard in a
    polymorphic field is presented to a font source, the font source is free
    to substitute any value that is convenient.  However, font sources should
    try to use a value that would be considered \fInormal\fP or \fImedium\fP for the
    particular font.  For example, if an optical size variable is unresolved,
    the font source should provide a value appropriate to the size of the
    font.
    .LP
    The result of specifying an out-of-range value for a polymorphic field is
    undefined.  The font source may treat this as a \fBBadName\fP error, treat the
    value as if it were the closest legal value, or extrapolate to try to
    accommodate the value.
    .NH 1
    Affected Elements of Xlib and the X Protocol
    .XS
    \*(SN Affected Elements of Xlib and the X Protocol
    .XE
    .LP
    The following X protocol requests must support the XLFD conventions:
    .IP \(bu 5
    .PN OpenFont
    \- for the name argument
    .IP \(bu 5
    .PN ListFonts
    \- for the pattern argument
    .IP \(bu 5
    .PN ListFontsWithInfo
    \- for the pattern argument
    .LP
    In addition, 
    the following Xlib functions must support the XLFD conventions:
    .IP \(bu 5
    .PN XLoadFont
    \- for the name argument
    .IP \(bu 5
    .PN XListFontsWithInfo
    \- for the pattern argument
    .IP \(bu 5
    .PN XLoadQueryFont
    \- for the name argument
    .IP \(bu 5
    .PN XListFonts
    \- for the pattern argument
    .NH 1
    BDF Conformance
    .XS
    \*(SN BDF Conformance
    .XE
    .LP
    The bitmap font distribution and interchange format adopted by the 
    X Consortium (BDF V2.1) provides a general mechanism for identifying the 
    font name of an X font and a variable list of font properties, 
    but it does not mandate the syntax or semantics of the font name 
    or the semantics of the font properties that might be provided in a BDF font.
    This section identifies the requirements for BDF fonts that conform to XLFD.
    .NH 2
    XLFD Conformance Requirements
    .XS
    \*(SN XLFD Conformance Requirements
    .XE
    .LP
    A BDF font conforms to the XLFD specification if and only if the 
    following conditions are satisfied:
    .IP \(bu 5
    The value for the BDF item \fBFONT\fP conforms to the syntax 
    and semantic definition of a XLFD 
    .PN FontName 
    string.
    .IP \(bu 5
    The 
    .PN FontName 
    begins with the X 
    .PN FontNameRegistry 
    prefix: \*Q\-\*U.
    .IP \(bu 5
    All XLFD 
    .PN FontName 
    fields are defined.
    .IP \(bu 5
    Any FontProperties provided conform in name and semantics to the XLFD 
    .PN FontProperty 
    definitions.
    .LP             
    A simple method of testing for conformance would entail verifying that the 
    .PN FontNameRegistry 
    prefix is the string \*Q\-\*U, 
    that the number of field delimiters in the string and coded field values 
    are valid, 
    and that each font property name either matches a standard XLFD property name 
    or follows the definition of a private property.
    .NH 2
    FONT_ASCENT, FONT_DESCENT, and DEFAULT_CHAR
    .XS
    \*(SN FONT_ASCENT, FONT_DESCENT, and DEFAULT_CHAR
    .XE
    .LP
    FONT_ASCENT, FONT_DESCENT, and DEFAULT_CHAR are provided in the BDF 
    specification as properties that are moved to the 
    .PN XFontStruct 
    by the BDF font compiler in generating the X server-specific 
    binary font encoding.
    If present, 
    these properties shall comply with the following semantic definitions.
    .NH 3
    FONT_ASCENT
    .XS
    \*(SN FONT_ASCENT
    .XE
    .LP
    FONT_ASCENT is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the recommended typographic ascent above the baseline 
    for determining interline spacing.
    Specific glyphs of the font may extend beyond this.
    If the current position point for line \fIn\fP is at [X,Y], 
    then the origin of the next line \fIm = n + 1\fP
    (allowing for a possible font change) is 
    [X, Y + FONT_DESCENTn + FONT_ASCENTm].
    .LP
    FONT_ASCENT can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (FONT_ASCENT undefined) then
       FONT_ASCENT = maximum ascent
    .DE
    where maximum ascent is the maximum ascent (above the baseline)
    in pixels of any glyph in the font.
    .NH 3
    FONT_DESCENT
    .XS
    \*(SN FONT_DESCENT
    .XE
    .LP
    FONT_DESCENT is an integer value (of type INT32)
    that gives the recommended typographic descent below the baseline
    for determining interline spacing.
    Specific glyphs of the font may extend beyond this.
    If the current position point for line \fIn\fP is at [X,Y],
    then the origin of the next line \fIm = n+1\fP
    (allowing for a possible font change) is 
    [X, Y + FONT_DESCENTn + FONT_ASCENTm].
    .LP
    The logical extent of the font is inclusive between the Y-coordinate values: 
    Y \- FONT_ASCENT and Y + FONT_DESCENT + 1.
    .LP
    FONT_DESCENT can be approximated if not provided as a font property, 
    according to the following algorithm:
    .LP
    .DS
    if (FONT_DESCENT undefined) then
       FONT_DESCENT = maximum descent
    .DE
    where maximum descent is the maximum descent (below the baseline)
    in pixels of any glyph in the font.
    .NH 3
    DEFAULT_CHAR
    .XS
    \*(SN DEFAULT_CHAR
    .XE
    .LP
    The DEFAULT_CHAR is an unsigned integer value (of type CARD32)
    that specifies the index
    of the default character to be used by the X server when an attempt
    is made to display an undefined or nonexistent character in the font.
    (For a font using a 2-byte matrix format,
    the index bytes are encoded in the integer as byte1 * 65536 + byte2.)
    If the DEFAULT_CHAR itself specifies an undefined or nonexistent character 
    in the font, 
    then no display is performed.
    .LP
    DEFAULT_CHAR cannot be approximated if not provided as a font property.
    .\"
    .\" print Table of Contents
    .if o .bp \" blank page to make count even
    .bp 1
    .af PN i
    .PX