Enter Your Reply The Comment You're Replying To Matthew Montchalin wrote on Tue, Oct 25, 2005 09:42 PM UTC:In a day and age where many people think it too much work to do anything other than rastering out a single line of pixels to the laserprinter, and then, as needs be, repeat it, row by row, until the picture is printed, it might go past some people - the ones that only have Windows - that there are still some people out there who sit around loading 'softfonts' into their memory, and then, after exporting those fonts to a laserprinter, find it convenient to juggle them around with no more than a short ESC sequence to effect an overall change in printout. (It sure beats having to reload 64K of bytes every time you want to switch from italic to upright, or from plain to bold, or large to small, including subscripts and superscript, just to print out a document of medium complexity.) Back in the olden days, laserprinters tended to have just enough room for a few dozen softfonts, and the only way to get them in, was by sending ESC codes to the laserprinter, almost always with a preliminary 'printer reset' code consisting of two bytes: 1b 45 - so I was wondering if you had any tips on how to modify my laserfonts from the olden days for use with Windows? Of course, things are more complicated than snipping off two bytes. It turns out that there are hosts of other ESC sequences that need to be fixed up, or turned around. Like whether a font is proportional or fixed, upright or italic, that sort of thing. Edit Form You may not post a new comment, because ItemID a graphic editor does not match any item.