Canon imageCLASS MF7460 imageCLASS MF7400 Series Reference Guide - Page 434
Typeface, Stroke Weight, Style, Point Size
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Before Using the Machine 1 Original and Paper 2 Copying 3 Sending and Receiving 4 Printing and Scanning 5 Network (imageCLASS 6 MF7480/MF7470 Only) Remote UI (imageCLASS 7 MF7480/MF7470 Only) System Settings 8 Maintenance 9 Troubleshooting 10 Appendix 11 Typeface Typeface refers to the design of the characters and symbols. The following figure shows an example of some typefaces. Stroke Weight Stroke weight refers to the thickness of the print. There are light, medium, and bold stroke weights. The printer function has medium and bold fonts available. The figure below shows an example of medium and bold printing. Style Style refers to the shape of the characters. The printer function can print in two styles: upright and italic. With some fonts, like CourierPS and Letter Gothic, the terms "Oblique" and "Slanted" are used in the same manner as italics. Back Previous Next TOP Point Size Point size refers to the height of the character. Character size is measured in points. One inch is divided into 72 points and 1 point is 1/72 of an inch (about 0.35 mm). The printer function has bitmapped fonts and scalable fonts available. The bitmapped fonts are fixed in size, but the scalable fonts are not fixed in size. Scalable fonts are freely scalable to any size you wish in 0.1 point increments. The following figure shows an example of various point sizes. See "Fonts and Scalable Fonts," on p. 11-54, for more information on bitmapped fonts and scalable fonts. Table of Contents Index 11-51