CTAN Update: mathdesign
Date: June 20, 2013 7:00:56 PM CEST
Paul Pichaureau submitted an update to the
mathdesign
package.
Summary description: High quality, free mathematical fonts that match with existing text fonts.
License type: gpl
Announcement text:
v 2.6 * distribution splitted in "free" and "commercial-fonts" * fontdimen corrected (for fractions) * infinity symbol redesigned * afm files no longer distributed
This package is located at http://mirror.ctan.org/fonts/mathdesign . More information is at http://www.ctan.org/pkg/mathdesign (if the package is new it may take a day for that information to appear). We are supported by the TeX Users Group http://www.tug.org . Please join a users group; see http://www.tug.org/usergroups.html .
Thanks for the upload. For the CTAN Team Rainer Schöpf
v 2.6 * distribution splitted in "free" and "commercial-fonts" * fontdimen corrected (for fractions) * infinity symbol redesigned * afm files no longer distributed
This package is located at http://mirror.ctan.org/fonts/mathdesign . More information is at http://www.ctan.org/pkg/mathdesign (if the package is new it may take a day for that information to appear). We are supported by the TeX Users Group http://www.tug.org . Please join a users group; see http://www.tug.org/usergroups.html .
Thanks for the upload. For the CTAN Team Rainer Schöpf
mathdesign – Mathematical fonts to fit with particular text fonts
The Math Design project offers free mathematical fonts that match with existing text fonts.
To date, three free font families are available: Adobe Utopia, URW Garamond and Bitstream Charter. Three commercial fonts are also supported: Adobe Garamond Pro, Adobe UtopiaStd and ITC Charter.
Mathdesign covers the whole LaTeX glyph set, including AMS symbols and some extra. Both roman and bold versions of these symbols can be used. Moreover you can choose between three greek fonts (two of them created by the Greek Font Society).
Package | mathdesign |
Version | 2.31 |
Copyright | 2003, 2012 Paul Pichaureau for the MathDesign Project |
Maintainer | Paul Pichaureau |