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34 lines
1.3 KiB
TeX
34 lines
1.3 KiB
TeX
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\documentclass{article}
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\usepackage{microtype}
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\usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
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\usepackage{fourier}
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\pagestyle{empty}
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\linespread{1.2}
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\begin{document}
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\frenchspacing
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\noindent
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{\LARGE 4 Utopia}\\
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~\\
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Utopia is a transitional serif typeface designed by Robert Slimbach, and
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first released in 1989 by Adobe. Its looks are consistent, formal, and very
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clearly readable even on low-resolution media such as computer printers and
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screens.
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Adobe's release of Utopia was a response to Bitstream's release of the
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Charter typeface (\textbackslash usepackage\{charter\}) in 1987,
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another highly readable set of fonts designed specifically for
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low-resolution printers. Both corporations donated their fonts to the
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X Consortium in 1992 in order to gain popularity. Adobe, however, did
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so using very restrictive license, causing concerns in the free
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software community. (This is the reason you see a ``This package is
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to be regarded as obsolete'' warning when you try to \textbackslash
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usepackage\{utopia\} in \LaTeX.)
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In 2006, Adobe re-released Utopia, this time under a truly free license, and
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since then it has been available through at least two packages: the
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Fourier-GUTenberg project (\textbackslash usepackage\{fourier\}), and
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\emph{mathdesign} (\textbackslash usepackage[utopia]\{mathdesign\}).
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\end{document}
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