User Guide
Chapter 3 Fonts and encodings
00
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
0A
0B
0C
0D
0E
0F
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
1A
1B
1C
1D
1E
1F
! " #
@ A B C
` a b c
$
D
d
%
E
e
&
F
f
'
G
g
(
H
h
)
I
i
*
J
j
+
K
k
,
L
l
M
m
.
N
n
/
O
o
0
P
p
1
Q
q
2
R
r
3
S
s
4
T
t
5
U
u
6
V
v
7
W
w
8
X
x
9
Y
y
:
Z
z
;
[
{
<
\
|
=
]
}
>
^
~
?
_
00
20
40
60
80
A0
C0
E0
Figure 3-2: WinAnsi Encoding
The code chart below shows the characters in the MacRomanEncoding. as it sounds, this is the standard
encoding on Macintosh computers in America and Western Europe. As usual with non-unicode encodings,
the first 128 code points (top 4 rows in this case) are the ASCII standard and agree with the WinAnsi code
chart above; but the bottom 4 rows differ.
00
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
0A
0B
0C
0D
0E
0F
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
1A
1B
1C
1D
1E
1F
@
`
!
A
a
"
B
b
#
C
c
$
D
d
%
E
e
&
F
f
'
G
g
(
H
h
)
I
i
*
J
j
+
K
k
,
L
l
M
m
.
N
n
/
O
o
0
P
p
1
Q
q
2
R
r
3
S
s
4
T
t
5
U
u
6
V
v
7
W
w
8
X
x
9
Y
y
:
Z
z
;
[
{
<
\
|
=
]
}
>
^
~
fi
?
_
fl
00
20
40
60
80
A0
C0
E0
Figure 3-3: MacRoman Encoding
These two encodings are available for the standard fonts (Helvetica, Times-Roman and Courier and their
variants) and will be available for most commercial fonts including those from Adobe. However, some fonts
contain non- text glyphs and the concept does not really apply. For example, ZapfDingbats and Symbol can
each be treated as having their own encoding.
00
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
0A
0B
0C
0D
0E
0F
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
1A
1B
1C
1D
1E
1F
00
20
40
60
80
A0
C0
E0
Figure 3-4: ZapfDingbats and its one and only encoding
00
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
0A
0B
0C
0D
0E
0F
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
1A
1B
1C
1D
1E
1F
&
;
[
{
<
=
]
}
>
?
_
00
20
40
60
80
A0
C0
E0
! #
Figure 3-5: Symbol and its one and only encoding
Page 50