Frequently Asked Question List for TeX
msx
and msy
fonts?
The msx
and msy
fonts were designed by the
American Mathematical Society in the very early days of TeX, for
use in typesetting papers for mathematical journals. They were
designed using the “old” MetaFont, which wasn’t portable and is no longer
available; for a long time they were only available in 300dpi versions
which only imperfectly matched modern printers. The AMS has
now redesigned the fonts, using the current version of MetaFont, and the
new versions are called the msa
and msb
families.
Nevertheless, msx
and msy
continue to turn up.
There may, of course, still be sites that haven’t got around to
upgrading; but, even if everyone upgraded, there would still be the
problem of old documents that specify them.
If you have a tex
source that requests msx
and
msy
, the best technique is to edit it so that it requests
msa
and msb
(you only need to change the single
letter in the font names).
A partial re-implementation of the blackboard-bold part of the
msy
font (covering C, N, R, S and Z, only) is available in
Type 1 format; if your mathematical needs only extend that far, the
font could be a good choice.
If you have a DVI file that requests the fonts, there is a package of virtual fonts to map the old to the new series.
FAQ ID: Q-msxy
Tags: deprecated