On Apr 12, 2007, at 5:00 PM, Paul Smith wrote:
On 4/13/07, Jens Noeckel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> >>>> I have a wide table to insert in a slide of a Beamer
>> >>>> presentation, and
>> >>>> I have tried the solution \scriptsize + \normalsize, but I am
>> >>>> actually
>> >>>> needing a even smaller size than scriptsize, as the table
does
>> >>>> not get
>> >>>> enough small. Is there some solution?
>> >>>
>> >>> Here is a listing of the available LaTeX font sizes.
>> >>>
>> >>> http://www.giss.nasa.gov/tools/latex/ltx-178.html
>> >>
>> >> Thanks, Bob. I am needing a size even smaller than tiny.
>> >
>> > I'm unaware of any smaller sizing. The default document font
size
>> > controls
>> > how small tiny is. If you set the default font smaller then tiny
>> would
>> > decrease also.
>>
>> Using TeX in the preamble, you could do any size you want (in text
>> mode). Here is an example LaTeX file that seems to do what is
>> desired:
>>
>>
>> \documentclass[12pt]{article}
>> \def\supertiny{ \font\supertinyfont = cmr10 at 4pt \relax
>> \supertinyfont}
>>
>> \begin{document}
>> Hello \tiny Guten Tag \supertiny Hello \normalsize Goodbye
>> \end{document}
>>
>>
>>
>> Obviously, the \def ... goes into the LaTeX Preamble, and the
>> \supertiny command has to be entered as ERT. The size of the
>> supertiny font is 4pt as defined in the Preamble line, and you can
>> make it as small as you want!
>
> Thanks, Jens. In case one works with Mathpazo fonts, one should
> replace cmr10 by what?
I think it would be either zpplcmr, pplr, or fplmr instead of cmr10.
Maybe a font expert can correct me if I'm wrong...
None works. And I have
$ locate mathpazo
/usr/share/texmf/fonts/type1/public/mathpazo
/usr/share/texmf/fonts/type1/public/mathpazo/fplmb.pfb
/usr/share/texmf/fonts/type1/public/mathpazo/fplmbb.pfb
/usr/share/texmf/fonts/type1/public/mathpazo/fplmbi.pfb
/usr/share/texmf/fonts/type1/public/mathpazo/fplmr.pfb
/usr/share/texmf/fonts/type1/public/mathpazo/fplmri.pfb
/usr/share/texmf/tex/latex/psnfss/mathpazo.sty
$
Paul
Maybe this is another misunderstanding: are you trying to do this in
text mode or in an equation environment? Anyway, I just tried
something with mathpazo that works in equations:
$$
\fontsize{4}{5}\selectfont\sin\alpha
$$
produces a super tiny sine of alpha.
Regarding my earlier solution, it works for me... to see what's wrong
on your side one would need an example. But maybe this alternative
solution is what you really want.
Jens