0

I'm asking what this font is and whether this is a TrueType/OpenType font that works normally with non-latex software (preferrably) or an in-built math font in LaTeX. enter image description here

  • 2
    This was produced with a typewriter.. – egreg Jun 02 '20 at 22:01
  • Well I don't exactly have access to a pdf file and I have tried most methods listed in the link u supplied but thank for you input and I'll keep on searching I suppose – Bio Corn Jun 02 '20 at 22:02
  • Does this being produced with a typewriter imply that I won't be able to find the font? If so then that'd be pretty unfortunate – Bio Corn Jun 02 '20 at 22:03
  • For instance, the vertical position of the letter e varies a bit, so it is a bit reminiscent of https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/344272/194703. –  Jun 03 '20 at 00:16
  • Maybe a typewriter but maybe an impact printer, with a math print-ball or daisy wheel. – Donald Arseneau Jun 03 '20 at 01:40
  • Diablos did a physical two-pass, swapping daisy wheels (http://www.columbia.edu/cu/computinghistory/diablo.html), so we know where TeX got the idea :). Unrelated - no-one makes the ink ribbons anymore. – Cicada Jun 03 '20 at 10:17

0 Answers0