CID fonts
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
CID Fonts (also known as, CID-keyed Fonts, CID-based Fonts) are a form of Type 1, PostScript font, capable of addressing large amount of glyphs. They were developed to support non-Roman character sets as these comprise more characters than the Roman typefaces that make up most western fonts. These include Identity-H and Identity-V fonts.
Adobe developed the CID-keyed font format to solve the problems in OCF/Type 0 fonts, for addressing the complex Asian-language (CJK) encoding and very large character set issues.
CID-keyed font format can be used with the Type 1 font format for standard CID-keyed fonts, or Type 2 for CID-keyed OpenType fonts.
[edit] See also
- Adobe Systems
- Ghostscript
- Portable Document Format
- Scene description language
- Vector graphics
- Font
- Computer font
- Display PostScript
- PostScript Printer Description (PPD) drivers.
- PostScript FAQ at Wikibooks.