Frequently Asked Question List for TeX
The LaTeX standard classes have a concept of a (base) “document
font” size; this size is the basis on which other font sizes (those
from \tiny
to \Huge
) are determined. The classes are designed
on the assumption that they won’t be used with sizes other than the
set that LaTeX offers by default (10–12pt), but people regularly
find they need other sizes. The proper response to such a requirement
is to produce a new design for the document, but many people don’t
fancy doing that.
A simple solution is to use the extsizes
bundle. This
bundle offers “extended” versions of the article, report, book and
letter classes, at sizes of 8, 9, 14, 17 and 20pt as well as the
standard 10–12pt. Since little has been done to these classes other
than to adjust font sizes and things directly related to them, they
may not be optimal — but they are at least practical.
More satisfactory are the KOMA-script classes, which are
designed to work properly with the class option files that come with
extsizes
, and the memoir
class that has its own
options for document font sizes 9pt–12pt, 14pt, 17pt, 20pt, 25pt,
30pt, 36pt, 48pt and 60pt. The classes also offer size setup for any
old font size, and the scrextend
package can extend this
facility for use with any class:
\usepackage[fontsize=12.3]{scrextend}
will indeed set up the main document font to have size 12.3pt
with an appropriate default baselineskip. The package “knows” about
KOMA-script’s default sizes, and for eccentric sizes
such as the example, it will produce a warning:
Using fallback calculation to setup font sizes
(users should avoid becoming excited about that…). The package
suffers from the same problem as does extsizes
: the
resulting font sizes are the only feature of the document that
is changed, and the appearance of the resulting document will probably
not be as good as if the document class had been designed for use at
the size chosen.
Many classes, designed to produce typeset results other than on
“ordinary” paper, will have their own font size mechanisms and
ranges of sizes. This is true, for example, of
poster classes (such as a0poster
), and of
presentation and lecturing classes (such as
beamer
).
FAQ ID: Q-extsizes
Tags: classes