The Shohl-Fold font (what a silly name) is © 1992 by D. Rakowski, all rights reserved. The letters look like they are on a continuous fanfold -- some facing left, some facing right. To get the visual effect of a continuous fanfold, then, a left-facing letter should follow a right-facing letter should follow a left-facing letter, etc. To wit, there are two versions of each character in the font -- the left-facing version and the right-facing version. Here are the rules for where to find the characters: ALPHABETIC CHARACTERS: All capital letters face LEFT. All lower-case letters face RIGHT. NUMBERS AND PUNCTUATION Keyboard mapping was a little difficult for punctuation; in general, the normal keys to produce a number or punctuation mark will produce a letter facing LEFT. The RIGHT-facing versions add the option key (e.g., pressing 3 gives you a left-facing 3; pressing option 3 gives you a right-facing 3). However, for PC users of the font, these are high ASCII characters that you have to produce using the NUM LOCK/ALT shuffle. Therefore, keep in mind the following rule: ALL NUMBERS AND PUNCTUATION FACE LEFT. Right-facing versions of numbers and punctuation are at the following ASCII values: 0 - 188 1 - 193 2 - 170 3 - 163 4 - 162 5 - 176 6 - 164 7 - 166 8 - 165 9 - 187 . - 179 , - 178 ' - 190 " - 174 ! - 218 ? - 192 & - 224 $ - 221 There is also a combined apostrophe-S ligature on the Mac Keyboard at option-s and shift-option-s; the ASCII values for this ligature are 167 and 234, respectively. BLANK SECTIONS OF FANFOLD The spacebar produces only white space; to get a blank section of fanfold, use left parenthesis, left bracket or left brace for a LEFT-facing blank fanfold; use right parenthesis, right bracket or right brace for a RIGHT-facing blank piece of fanfold. SHAREWARE INFORMATION Your shareware fee is $3 and should be in the form of a check made out to Columbia University and sent to Cynthia Lemiesz, Music Department, 703 Dodge Hall, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027. Your shareware fee is fully tax-deductible and goes toward the cost of performances of music composed by Columbia students. Shohl-Fold, the font, is without limitations as to its distribution. Nonprofit organizations such as user groups may distribute the font freely; for profit companies are prohibited from distributing the font without permission. Shohl-Fold comes from Insect Bytes, a place where 17 megabytes seems to be fine for now.