% allfont.tex Test Insular Majuscule fonts \documentclass{article} \usepackage{allimaj} \newcommand{\romannum}[1]{\romannumeral #1} \newcommand{\Romannum}[1]{\uppercase\expandafter{\romannumeral #1}} \newcommand{\ABC}{ABCDEFGHIJKL MNOPQRSTUVWXYZ} \newcommand{\abc}{abcdefghijkl mnopqrstuvwxyz} \newcommand{\punct}{.,;:!?`' \&{} () []} \newcommand{\dashes}{- -- ---} \newcommand{\figs}{0123456789} \newcommand{\sentence}{% this is an example of the insular majuscule font. now is the time for all good men, and women, to come to the aid of the party while the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog:} \newcommand{\Sentence}{% This is an example of the Insular Majuscule font. Now is the time for all good men, and women, to come to the aid of the party while the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog:} \newcommand{\latin}{Te canit adcelebratqve polvs rex gazifer hymnis. Trans zephyriqve globvm scandvnt tva facta per axem.} \title{Try Insular Majuscule Fonts} \author{} \date{} \pagenumbering{roman} \begin{document} \maketitle \tableofcontents \section{First section} This provides a short test of the characters in the Insular Majuscule fonts --- the \verb|imaj| font family. \begin{center} The Insular Majuscule Huge normal font. \\ \par {\Huge \ABC\\ \abc\\ \punct{}\dashes\\ \figs\\ \par } \end{center} \begin{center} The Insular Majuscule font in its normal size \\ {\ABC{} \abc{} \punct{} \dashes{} \figs} \\ \end{center} \begin{center} The bold normal font, the normal font, and the bold Computer Modern Roman, all in the normal size \\ {\textbf{\abc{} \figs}} \\ {\abc{} \figs} \\ \textcmr{\textbf{\abc{} \figs}} \\ \end{center} \begin{center} The bold versions, in Huge and tiny sizes. \par \bfseries \Huge \abc{} \figs \par \tiny \abc{} \figs \par \end{center} \begin{center} The font in the tiny size \\ \par {\tiny \ABC{} \\ \abc\\ \figs\\ \par } \end{center} \begin{center} Some ligatures in the normal font \\ {``first active brown dog --- but quick \& red fox?''} \end{center} \section{Second section} First some well known English phrases in an abcedarian sentence. \Sentence{} These are two Latin abecedarian sentences dating from about \Romannum{790}. \latin{} \textcmss{This is the end of the test file, with this sentence being typeset using the Computer Modern Sans font in the point size as specified for this document.} \end{document}