![]() tex as egreg did for \bib*font or else the ones in the pnastwo class will take effect and look ugly, (ii) edit the pnaftwof package or (iii) edit the frutiger and font definitions in the pnaftwo class and ditch the pnaftwof package. Theme fonts are unique to a document template and may change from one document to another. Theme fonts have an information icon next to them in the list. These fonts always appear listed first in the Most Recently Used section of the list. ![]() So you have to either (i) redo those defs manually in the. Theme fonts are the default body and headings fonts used in your document. in the sense that using any of these will result in the string displayed in roman font, rather than helvetica (serif).Įgreg's solution addresses the references problem but figure captions, footnotes, abstract, title, author names, etc., all will still suffer as they use different font deifnitions (based on frutiger defs). It defines multiple font names for different sizes and styles instead of a family, which breaks the usage of \textit, \textbf, \em, \it, \bf etc. The pnastwo class also defines frutiger fonts (links to helvetica) and then definitions based on them. It would be ideal to ditch the pnastwof altogether but that's not so trivial. This then fixes the references accents issue.Īs egreg also states in his answer, the class and package are pretty badly written. They should be phvr*8t instead of phvr*: %% Karl Berry Names: The font name for the helvetica font suggested by PNAS are actually wrong. tex file: \documentclass 1(1):1-10.Īfter more digging, I worked out a solution which allows using the pnastwof package. I use the PNAS template and compile with pdflatex under MacOSX 10.9.2 and MacTeX 2013 or 2014 (tried both).
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