The refont program accepts input which may contain any common method for
describing fonts.  It outputs a version of the input which uses one method
of your choice.

              +----------------------------------------------+
	      |		      *** WARNING ***		     |
	      |						     |
	      |	This program has not been thoroughly tested. |
	      |	The code is ugly. I'm not proud of this one. |
              +----------------------------------------------+

The invocation signature of refont is...

	refont [-bcdefx] [files]...

... where "-bcdefx" represents *one* of the following...
	-b	use overtyping, implemented by backspacing
	-c	use overtyping, implemented with carriage returns
	-d	use nroff style "dot" commands (doesn't work very well yet)
	-e	use Epson-compatible printer escape codes
	-f	use the "backslash-f" notation
	-x	strip all formatting information

If the "files" list is empty, then refont reads from stdin, unless stdin has
not been redirected.  If more than one file is named, then formfeeds are
inserted between them.

If you have an Epson-compatible printer, then you can use the following
command to print a file (here, the file "foo") which contains some other
style of formatting notation:

	$ refont -e foo | lpr

For other printers, try one of the overtyping notations:

	$ refont -c foo | lpr
