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post - PostScript Table (OpenType 1.5)

This table contains additional information needed to use TrueType or OpenType™ fonts on PostScript printers. This includes data for the FontInfo dictionary entry and the PostScript names of all the glyphs. For more information about PostScript names, see the Adobe document Unicode and Glyph Names.

Versions 1.0, 2.0, and 2.5 refer to TrueType fonts and OpenType fonts with TrueType data. OpenType fonts with TrueType data may also use Version 3.0. OpenType fonts with CFF data use Version 3.0 only.

The table begins as follows:

Type Name Description
Fixed Version 0x00010000 for version 1.0
0x00020000 for version 2.0
0x00025000 for version 2.5 (deprecated)
0x00030000 for version 3.0
Fixed italicAngle Italic angle in counter-clockwise degrees from the vertical. Zero for upright text, negative for text that leans to the right (forward).
FWord underlinePosition This is the suggested distance of the top of the underline from the baseline (negative values indicate below baseline).
The PostScript definition of this FontInfo dictionary key (the y coordinate of the center of the stroke) is not used for historical reasons. The value of the PostScript key may be calculated by subtracting half the underlineThickness from the value of this field.
FWord underlineThickness Suggested values for the underline thickness.
ULONG isFixedPitch Set to 0 if the font is proportionally spaced, non-zero if the font is not proportionally spaced (i.e. monospaced).
ULONG minMemType42 Minimum memory usage when an OpenType font is downloaded.
ULONG maxMemType42 Maximum memory usage when an OpenType font is downloaded.
ULONG minMemType1 Minimum memory usage when an OpenType font is downloaded as a Type 1 font.
ULONG maxMemType1 Maximum memory usage when an OpenType font is downloaded as a Type 1 font.

The last four entries in the table are present because PostScript drivers can do better memory management if the virtual memory (VM) requirements of a downloadable OpenType font are known before the font is downloaded. This information should be supplied if known. If it is not known, set the value to zero. The driver will still work but will be less efficient.

Maximum memory usage is minimum memory usage plus maximum runtime memory use. Maximum runtime memory use depends on the maximum band size of any bitmap potentially rasterized by the font scaler. Runtime memory usage could be calculated by rendering characters at different point sizes and comparing memory use.

If the version is 1.0 or 3.0, the table ends here. The additional entries for versions 2.0 and 2.5 are shown below. Apple has defined a version 4.0 for use with Apple Advanced Typography (AAT), which is described in their documentation.

Version 1.0

This TrueType-based font file contains exactly the 258 glyphs in the standard Macintosh TrueType font file (see The WGL4.0 Character Set chapter for a list of the Macintosh glyphs). As a result, the glyph names are taken from the system with no storage required by the font.

Version 2.0

This is the version required by TrueType-based fonts to be used on Windows.

Type Name Description
USHORT numberOfGlyphs Number of glyphs (this should be the same as numGlyphs in 'maxp' table).
USHORT glyphNameIndex[numGlyphs]. This is not an offset, but is the ordinal number of the glyph in 'post' string tables.
CHAR names[numberNewGlyphs] Glyph names with length bytes [variable] (a Pascal string).

This TrueType-based font file contains glyphs not in the standard Macintosh set or the ordering of the glyphs in the TrueType font file is non-standard (again, for the Macintosh). The glyph name array maps the glyphs in this font to name index. If the name index is between 0 and 257, treat the name index as a glyph index in the Macintosh standard order. If the name index is between 258 and 32767, then subtract 258 and use that to index into the list of Pascal strings at the end of the table. Thus a given font may map some of its glyphs to the standard glyph names, and some to its own names.

Index numbers 32768 through 65535 are reserved for future use. If you do not want to associate a PostScript name with a particular glyph, use index number 0 which points the name .notdef.

Version 2.5

This version of the 'post' table has been deprecated as of OpenType Specification v1.3.

This version provides a space saving table for TrueType-based fonts which contain a pure subset of, or a simple reordering of, the standard Macintosh glyph set.

Type Name Description
USHORT numberOfGlyphs Number of glyphs
CHAR offset[numGlyphs] Difference between graphic index and standard order of glyph

This version is useful for TrueType-based font files that contain only glyphs in the standard Macintosh glyph set but which have those glyphs arranged in a non-standard order or which are missing some glyphs. The table contains one byte for each glyph in the font file. The byte is treated as a signed offset that maps the glyph index used in this font into the standard glyph index. In other words, assuming that the font contains the three glyphs A, B, and C which are the 37th, 38th, and 39th glyphs in the standard ordering, the 'post' table would contain the bytes +36, +36, +36. This format has been deprecated by Apple, as of February 2000.

Version 3.0

This version is used by OpenType fonts with TrueType or CFF data. The version makes it possible to create a special font that is not burdened with a large 'post' table set of glyph names.

This version specifies that no PostScript name information is provided for the glyphs in this font file. The printing behavior of this version on PostScript printers is unspecified, except that it should not result in a fatal or unrecoverable error. Some drivers may print nothing, other drivers may attempt to print using a default naming scheme.

Windows makes use of the italic angle value in the 'post' table but does not actually require any glyph names to be stored as Pascal strings.