From 85e066f8cb926d22a085b6e83b9a998bea01ece3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Matthew Butterick Date: Mon, 24 Apr 2017 16:40:54 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] =?UTF-8?q?OS=20X=20=E2=86=92=20Mac=20OS?= MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit --- font-recommendations.html.pm | 2 +- how-to-make-a-pdf.html.pm | 2 +- index.html.pm | 2 +- introduction.html.pm | 2 +- system-fonts.html.pm | 2 +- 5 files changed, 5 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/font-recommendations.html.pm b/font-recommendations.html.pm index fd9c0c9..216c3f3 100644 --- a/font-recommendations.html.pm +++ b/font-recommendations.html.pm @@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ Professional fonts are also a great value. Yes, they cost money. But you can get ◊btw{ -Most professional fonts are delivered in OpenType format (.otf extension). Some are offered in the older TrueType format (.ttf ). OpenType and TrueType files can be used on either Windows or OS X, so the technological distinctions are largely moot. One notable exception: Microsoft Office on Windows, for various historical reasons, still does better with TrueType fonts. So if you’re getting a professional font to use with Office, be sure to get the TrueType versions. +Most professional fonts are delivered in OpenType format (.otf extension). Some are offered in the older TrueType format (.ttf ). OpenType and TrueType files can be used on either Windows or Mac OS, so the technological distinctions are largely moot. One notable exception: Microsoft Office on Windows, for various historical reasons, still does better with TrueType fonts. So if you’re getting a professional font to use with Office, be sure to get the TrueType versions. What’s the difference between a font and a typeface? Historically, ◊em{typeface} referred to the overall family (e.g., Baskerville) and ◊em{font} referred to a specific instance of the family (e.g., 10-point Baskerville bold italic). This distinction made sense in the letterpress age, when each font corresponded to a case of metal type. But as Bryan Garner has pointed out, “[t]echnology has changed the meaning of this term ... font most often denotes a whole family of styles that can be printed at almost any size.” (◊em{Garner’s Modern American Usage}, 3rd ed., page 364.) Internet pedants may carp, but it’s fine to use ◊em{font} to mean both the family and a specific style. I do. diff --git a/how-to-make-a-pdf.html.pm b/how-to-make-a-pdf.html.pm index 9277812..1786029 100644 --- a/how-to-make-a-pdf.html.pm +++ b/how-to-make-a-pdf.html.pm @@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ The right way: “print” the document directly to PDF. ◊os{Windows} Install a printer driver that outputs PDFs instead of sending a file to a physical printer. If you have a commercial version of Adobe Acrobat (not just the free Acrobat Reader), the ‹Adobe PDF› driver should already be installed. If you don’t have Adobe Acrobat, numerous third-party PDF printer drivers are available. When you issue the print command, you’ll see the ‹Print› dialog box. At the top of this box is a popup menu listing the installed printers. Select your PDF printer. Set other options as needed and click ‹OK›. -◊os{OS X} You don’t need a special print driver — printing directly to PDF is built into OS X. Issue the ‹Print› command. The dialog box that appears has a button at the lower left labeled ‹PDF›. Click this button. From the menu that appears, select ‹Save as PDF›. In the next dialog box, enter a filename and click ‹Save›. +◊os{Mac OS} You don’t need a special print driver — printing directly to PDF is built into Mac OS. Issue the ‹Print› command. The dialog box that appears has a button at the lower left labeled ‹PDF›. Click this button. From the menu that appears, select ‹Save as PDF›. In the next dialog box, enter a filename and click ‹Save›. “What’s the difference? Either way, you end up with a PDF.” True. But one PDF is much better than the other. diff --git a/index.html.pm b/index.html.pm index 497c272..e4a34e7 100644 --- a/index.html.pm +++ b/index.html.pm @@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ available now} New ◊xref{sample documents} include ◊xref{presentations}, ◊xref{contracts}, ◊xref{grids of numbers}, and ◊xref{court opinions}. -Technical tips have been updated to cover the newest versions of Word and WordPerfect on Windows, and Word on OS X +Technical tips have been updated to cover the newest versions of Word and WordPerfect on Windows, and Word on Mac OS New essays on font copyrights, screen-reading considerations, and typographic disputes in the courts diff --git a/introduction.html.pm b/introduction.html.pm index cb6e221..b83e75b 100644 --- a/introduction.html.pm +++ b/introduction.html.pm @@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ Regardless of the path you take, don’t just read the rules. Practice. Find typ The typographic rules in this book aren’t limited to particular software. You can apply them in just about any typesetting program. -I’ve included specific tips for five common word processors: Microsoft Word 2010 and 2013 (for Windows); Microsoft Word 2011 and 2016 (for OS X); and Corel WordPerfect X7 (for Windows). Tips for Word apply to all versions unless specified. +I’ve included specific tips for five common word processors: Microsoft Word 2010 and 2013 (for Windows); Microsoft Word 2011 and 2016 (for Mac OS); and Corel WordPerfect X7 (for Windows). Tips for Word apply to all versions unless specified. But the focus of this book is typography. It’s not intended to replace your software manual or help file. I’ve skipped technical issues that are especially basic (e.g., how to apply ◊xref{bold or italic} formatting) or especially complicated (e.g., how to implement ◊xref{paragraph and character styles}). diff --git a/system-fonts.html.pm b/system-fonts.html.pm index 2c4aa5c..d8c8c90 100644 --- a/system-fonts.html.pm +++ b/system-fonts.html.pm @@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ As professional writers, lawyers ought to rely on professional fonts. They’re But professional fonts aren’t always an option. Certain projects demand ◊em{system fonts}, which are the fonts already installed on your computer. In printed documents, they present three problems. ◊numbered-list{ -◊em{Many system fonts aren’t good}. The Windows and OS X libraries have improved, but they’re still minefields of awful fonts. I won’t name names, but my least favorite rhymes with Barial. +◊em{Many system fonts aren’t good}. The Windows and Mac OS libraries have improved, but they’re still minefields of awful fonts. I won’t name names, but my least favorite rhymes with Barial. ◊margin-note{Moreover, fonts