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I would like to make a presentation using a font style like this one: http://gallium.inria.fr/~fpottier/slides/fpottier-2008-06-pittsburgh.pdf


Screenshot:

enter image description here


Does anyone know which font is this?

jub0bs
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  • Usually, we don't put a greeting or a “thank you” in our posts. While this might seem strange at first, it is not a sign of lack of politeness, but rather part of our trying to keep everything very concise. Accepting and upvoting answers is the preferred way here to say “thank you” to users who helped you. – jub0bs May 26 '13 at 14:24
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    That font is some form of Tekton bold. – jub0bs May 26 '13 at 14:26
  • In 40 minutes the question became closed, by OP haven't obtained an answer. The source, given as a source of an answer, couldn't help me in identifying a font. – Przemysław Scherwentke May 26 '13 at 15:16
  • @PrzemysławScherwentke: See Informal Math Fonts from MicroPress for a reference of the font used. From there one could attempt to download the font once the name - Informal Math - has been identified. As mentioned in the linked post, "Informal Math is a set of fonts loosely based on the Adobe's Tekton (TM) family with all TeX mathematical symbols". – Werner May 26 '13 at 15:30
  • @Werner Thank you! Now I know the name of a font. I assume that in not Tekton bold, as suggested in comments. I am rather new here and I am still learning SX's customaries. In particular, the policy of closing questions sometimes remains for me mysterious. – Przemysław Scherwentke May 26 '13 at 15:48
  • @PrzemysławScherwentke: The linked/source duplicate stems from a discussion on Meta over a year ago. Mostly questions regarding specific fonts in documents are considered off-topic here. However, it was informally decided that a catch-all "duplicate" be generated for the purpose of keeping things TeX-related. Sure, the longer you're here, the more history you accumulate. Question closing is a community-driven initiative, yet the addiction to contribution (through rep or badges) is mysterious at times. – Werner May 26 '13 at 15:53

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