EDITFONT By Kelly Roach. Last revised 29-Jan-84. EDITFONT gives the user functions for creating and editting DISPLAY fonts which can be read and written as STRIKE font files. The following functions are provided to the user: (1) (EDITFONT FONT). FONT may be any DISPLAY FONTDESCRIPTOR datatype. The user will be presented with a matrix of 257 character bitmaps. The 257th char is the dummy char, used as a default for unspecified chars. Buttoning a character bitmap with the LEFT mouse button will call EDITBM on that character bitmap. Buttoning a character bitmap with the MIDDLE mouse button pops up a menu that allows the user to STOP (abort EDITFONT), OK (save EDITFONT's work into FONT), or DUMMY (make selected character an unspecified char). (2) (BLANKFONTCREATE FAMILY SIZE FACE ROTATION DEVICE FIRSTCHAR LASTCHAR ASCENT DESCENT WIDTH). This function will create a blank font for the user. Charcodes not between FIRSTCHAR and LASTCHAR are left unspecified. WIDTH may be a number, causing WIDTH to be the width of every character; or WIDTH may be a list of (IPLUS LASTCHAR (IMINUS FIRSTCHAR) 2) numbers, determining the width for each specified char plus the dummy char. Another good way to get a fresh font is to do a COPYALL of some already existing fontdescriptor (e.g. (COPYALL (FONTCREATE 'GACHA 10))). Use Interlisp's SETFONTDESCRIPTOR function to make your fonts known to Interlisp's FONTCREATE. (3) (READSTRIKEFONTFILE FAMILY SIZE FACE FILE). Reads STRIKE font FILE, returning a fontdescriptor. (4) (WRITESTRIKEFONTFILE FONT FILE). Writes FONT out to STRIKE file FILE. Can be read back in with READSTRIKEFONTFILE. You can put your STRIKE font files on FONTCREATE's search path by adding your font directory to Interlisp's global FONTDIRECTORIES. (5) AN IMPORTANT NOTE: The user is hereby warned that it is generally not a good idea to EDITFONT an existing font directly. I.e., instead of (EDITFONT (FONTCREATE 'GACHA 10)) I recommend (EDITFONT (COPYALL (FONTCREATE 'GACHA 10))) The reason you should be wary of editing an already existing font, is that the Interlisp WINDOW package caches certain parts of Interlisp FONTDESCRIPTORs on its windows. EDITFONT doesn't know about this cached info, and if you smash a font that the WINDOW package is also using, you may get some funny looking characters or worse. Comments and bugs can be sent to ROACH.PA.