<HTML> <HEAD> <!-- Created with AOLpress/2.0 --> <!-- AP: Created on: 23-Mar-2005 --> <!-- AP: Last modified: 23-Mar-2005 --> <TITLE>UniqueID and XUID</TITLE> <LINK REL="icon" href="ffanvil16.png"> <LINK REL="stylesheet" TYPE="text/css" HREF="FontForge.css"> </HEAD> <BODY> <DIV id="in"> <BLOCKQUOTE> <PRE>From: Thomas Phinney of Adobe Subject: [OpenType] Why you don't need UniqueIDs Date: Fri, 04 Mar 2005 10:04:41 -0800 </PRE> <P> Neither Type 1 nor OpenType CFF fonts require PostScript UniqueIDs. <P> Back in the mid-80s, when printing might be done on a 57K serial connection and printers might have 8 MHz processors, the caching of device-generated bitmaps enabled by UniqueIDs made a noticeable speed difference. With today's connection bandwidths and printers, the printing speed difference was insignificant in our tests (conducted around 2002), and certainly not enough to outweigh the risks of collisions between UniqueIDs for different fonts and the trouble of tracking the ID numbers. <P> For these reasons, Adobe stopped using UniqueIDs (and XUIDs) in our own OpenType CFF fonts. If we still made Type 1 fonts, we wouldn't use UniqueIDs for them, either. <P> You may of course continue to use UniqueIDs, it's just that they are not necessary. <P> Regards, <P> T <P> <P> Thomas W. Phinney<BR> Program Manager<BR> Fonts & Core Technologies<BR> Adobe Systems <P> <BLOCKQUOTE> C makes it easy to shoot yourself in the foot; <BR> C++ makes it harder, but when you do, <BR> it blows away your whole leg." <BR> - Bjarne Stroustrup </BLOCKQUOTE> </BLOCKQUOTE> </DIV> </BODY></HTML>