The particular symbol printed by \euro will in general
change depending on the font family, weight, and shape in use at
the time. This symbol can come from any source, and the package
user has complete control over which euro symbol is used in any
given situation. The package is pre-configured to behave sensibly
with many common text fonts and available euro symbols. The
\euro command can print ‘faked’ euro
symbols from a C with two lines across it when no suitable real
euro symbol is available; the package also includes code for
printing fake bold euro symbols for use when no real bold symbol
exists, as well as pre-configured support for a faked italic
version of the marvosym font.
Eurofont comes set up to use euro symbols from Adobe’s Eurofonts,
the marvosym font, the Eurosym font, and any available Text
Companion fonts. The selection between these can be done using
options passed to the package. The eurofont package also
‘knows’ about the
China2e font’s euro symbol,
and can be configured to use it.
If possible, get this package from your distribution using its installation manager. (For installation help, click on your distribution's name.)
| Distribution | Package name |
|---|---|
| MiKTeX | eurofont |
| TeX Live | -this package is not in TeX Live- |
You can also visit eurofont's CTAN directory to browse the source or download the material for installation by hand.
| Documentation on CTAN |
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| Documentation off CTAN | -none known- | ||
| Maintainers |
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| Version | 1.1.3 | ||
| License | Other free license | ||
| Related packages | |||
| Keywords |
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| Characterizations |
You can suggest changes to the keywords and characterizations and the maintainer information.
You can get information about any package.