TeX font metric files for PostScript fonts

Reputable font vendors such as Adobe supply metric files for each font, in AFM (Adobe Font Metric) form; these can be converted to TFM (TeX Font Metric) form. The CTAN archives have prebuilt metrics which will be more than enough for many people; but you may need to do the conversion yourself if you have special needs or acquire a new font. One important question is the encoding of (Latin character) fonts; while we all more or less agree about the position of about 96 characters in fonts (the basic ASCII set), the rest of the (typically) 256 vary. The most obvious problems are with floating accents and special characters such as the 'pounds sterling' sign. There are three ways of dealing with this: either you change the TeX macros which reference the characters (not much fun, and error-prone); or you change the encoding of the font (easier than you might think); or you use virtual fonts to pretend to TeX that the encoding is the same as it is used to. LaTeX2e has facilities for dealing with fonts in different encodings; read the LaTeX Companion for more details. In practice, if you do much non-English (but Latin script) typesetting, you are strongly recommended to use the fontenc package with option 'T1' to select 'Cork' encoding. A useful alternative is Y&Y's "private" LY1 encoding, which is designed to sit well with "Adobe standard" encoded fonts. Basic support of LY1 is available on CTAN: note that the "relation with Adobe's encoding" means that there are no virtual fonts in the LY1 world.

Alan Jeffrey's fontinst package is an AFM to TFM converter written in TeX; it is used to generate the files used by LaTeX2e's PSNFSS package to support use of PostScript fonts. It is a sophisticated package, not for the faint-hearted, but is powerful enough to cope with most needs. Much of its power relies on the use of virtual fonts.

For slightly simpler problems, Rokicki's afm2tfm, distributed with dvips, is fast and efficient; note that the metrics and styles that come with dvips are not currently LaTeX2e compatible.

For the Macintosh, there is a program called EdMetrics which does the job (and more). EdMetrics comes with the (commercial) Textures distribution, but is itself free software, and is available on CTAN.

Windows users can buy Y&Y's Font Manipulation Tools package which includes a powerful afmtotfm program among many other goodies.

dvips
dviware/dvips.tar.gz
EdMetrics
systems/mac/textures/utilities/EdMetrics.sea.hqx
fontinst
fonts/utilities/fontinst.tar.gz
LY1 support
macros/latex/contrib/supported/psnfssx/ly1.tar.gz
PS font metrics
Browse fonts/psfonts/ (this directory is at the root of a really rather large tree), or http://home.vr-web.de/was/fonts.html, which contains metrics for "fonts that didn't make it on to the CTAN directories".