======================================================================== These are generic installation instructions for the CM-LGC font package. Below, we assume that your TeX system is compliant to the TDS (TeX Directory Structure) standard. If it is not so, refer to documentation of your TeX system for the proper locations of files of various types. To install the CM-LGC font package in teTeX, fpTeX, TeX Live, MikTeX or VTeX/Free systems: 1. Copy everything in package's fonts/ directory to the directory of the same name inside one of your TEXMF trees (e. g. /usr/share/texmf/fonts/ or C:\texmf\fonts\). Thus all *.pfb, *.afm, *.tfm, *.vf, *.ofm and *.ovf files will be copied to the appropriate subdirectories where they should reside. 2. Again, copy everything in tex/ and (optionally) omega/ directories to the directories of the same name inside a TEXMF tree in order to make all *.fd files and style packages available to LaTeX and Omega/Lambda. 3. (a) [not for VTeX/Free] Repeat the step above also for package's dvips/ directory. (b) [for VTeX/Free only] For VTeX special font mapping files are required, which are not compatible with those used by dvips. Previously, these files resided in texmf/vtex/, but the directory structure has been changed in recent VTeX/Free versions (I have tested CM-LGC 0.5 with VTeX/Free 8.44), so that now all files responsible for font mapping should be placed into the common texmf/fonts/ directory instead. This is very inconvenient, because now you can't copy everyting in vtex/ to your texmf/vtex/ directory, as it is performed for all other files. On the other hand, I can't put my VTeX-specific stuff to the main fonts/ directory of the package, since this directory should contain only files needed for *all* TeX distributions. So beginning from v. 0.5 the vtex/ directory of the CM-LGC package contains one subdirectory, called fonts/. You should copy everything found in this subdirectory (basically, *.ali and *.enc files) to the texmf/fonts/ directory of your VTeX installation rather than to texmf/vtex. 5. Instruct your TeX (pdftex, vtex, etc.) or drivers (dvips, dvipdfm, etc.) to use your new fonts. To accomplish this, do one of the following points which corresponds to your TeX system (if it is not listed here, please refer to the documentation). (a) [for teTeX or fpTeX] Edit the file web2c/updmap.cfg inside your $VARTEXMF tree (or your main $TEXMF tree) and add the following line: Map cm-lgc.map Then run the `updmap' script to update font mapping files for dvips, pdfTeX and dvipdfm. (b) [for MikTeX] Edit the file updmap.cfg which resides inside your local TeX tree, e. g. C:\localtexmf\miktex\config\updmap.cfg (you should first create this file if it doesn't exist) and add the same line as for teTeX or fpTeX, i. e.: Map cm-lgc.map (c) [for VTeX/Free only] Edit the files .../texmf/vtex/config/ps.fm and .../texmf/vtex/config/pdf.fm, and add the following line into the TYPE1 section: cm-lgc.ali Optionally you may also add the cm-lgc-vf.ali file to the VF3 section of your pdf.fm file (create this section, if it doesn't exist). According to the VTeX documentation, adding a special mapping file for virtual fonts should enable searching in pdf files generated by VTeX, as well as copying text (including non-ASCII characters) into another applications. However, using this file really seems to have no effect, at least in VTeX/Free v. 8.44. 6. [not for VTeX/Free] Update the filename search database: run "mktexlsr" on teTeX, TeX Live, or fpTeX; run "initexmf -u" on MikTeX (or go to "MikTeX Options" -> "General" -> "File name database" and do the same by pressing the "Refresh now" button). 7. [not for VTeX/Free] update font mapping files for dvips, pdfTeX and dvipdfm: run the "updmap" script on teTeX, TeX Live, or fpTeX; run "initexmf --mkmaps" on MikTeX. 8. You can install the CM-LGC fonts as regular Windows fonts, if you wish to use them in non-TeX applications (e.g. packages for preparation of graphics which are to be included into your TeX documents, or even word processors, etc.) If you use Windows 9*/Me or Windows NT 4.0, you will need Adobe Type Manager (either a regular version, or the Lite version, which is available for free from the Adobe web site). Place all corresponding PFB, AFM, and INF files which you need to install into the same directory, and feed it to ATM (or to the standard Windows font installation utility under Windows 2000/XP). ========================================================================