More thoughts on the subject: It is painful to type \font\foo=foo12 for every font you need, and even more problematic, if it is decided to change the family, the size, or some other aspect, all the definitions of fonts need to be changed. Thus the need of font selection schemes. The idea of a font selecction scheme is that a user can type \bfseries and the current font automagically changes to the bold version of whatever it was at that point. Boldness is just une feature among many others that different variants from a font family may have. Any attempt to gather in a list all the posible features a font may have will fail, for it is an open problem, let alone unique. For some scripts other than the familiar latin, greek and cyrilic, some of the basic features do not even apply. For example, arabic and persian scripts do not have the contrast serif/sans serif, and do not have smallcaps, as was pointed in this list some years ago. Restricting ourselves to a latin script, some "artistic" fonts very likely provide only size variants, while others such as cm or lucida have plenty diferent variants with respect to several features and many of the posible combinations thereof. So one could start by thinking that the font switching commands be font-family dependent, and be provided by each family package. This would however lead to a severe compatibility problem. On the one side, if we decide to change the family for a document or a fraction of it, we would need to change all the font switching commands accordingly, for one font may call it \bold, while the other may call it \bfseries. On the other side, any macro that deals with fonts, such as a macro for typesetting a bold section header, would just work with the fonts that happen to make use of commands with the same name and the same meaning. So, what does the current font selection scheme provide?: a) The size axis, which is essential. b) The encoding axis, wich has turn to also be essential, although it took a time to realise, I think. c) Uniformity in the command names for some usual features (\bfseries, \itshape, ...) It has the problem that the definition of these commands is hardwired. For example, \bfseries selects the font associated to the command \<enc>/<fam>/<shape>/bx/<size>. A very well implemented mechanism of substitutions is provided, I know, but it does not prevent the bx pair of letters to be needed to be placed into the fourth argument (axis) of the font definition command \DeclareFontShape. So in order to provide a comprehensive selection scheme the FSS would need as many axis as a single family may need. Note that I say "as many as a **single** family may need". Each particuar axis, apart from enconding and size (and possibly family), simply exists, and can be conceptualy thought by any font family as it needs it. Even if it were not a high number of axis, it would lead to a completely useless combinatorial explosion of commands for fonts than just implement a few axes; either directly in the font definition files or generated on the fly by the \Declare... macros. The solution I see is the following one: 1) We make a list of names of user-level commands representing particular font features to be followed by any font that implements them. For example, \outline, \condensed, \shaded, \porportionalfigures, \trafficlike, \iranic, \novowels (This last for hebrew and others, if it makes sense). 2) We let those commands to be defined by the family. Therefore, when the family is changed, Latex has to take the definitions for the newly selected family. The point 1 guarantees that if you are in possession of a font with outlined and shaded variants you can use a macro designed by someone for typeseting an outlined heading with a shaded initial and it will always work. Some command could be decalred to take arguments, for example, \boldness{<number>}, \slantness{<number>}, where standard values for <number> should also be given. It is similar to the LICR, but instead of dealing with characters it deals with font features. The point 2 seems to me unavoidable. As I said, the feature classification is not closed nor unique, so a hardwired system of axis as the present one (or a hardwired system of whatever) will always be incomplete. This would make font families one more of those kind of entities that completely redefine a set of macros. Now I can think about languages and encodings. I think that it wouldn't be ifficult to implement it. We simply define \outline (say) to be \def\outline{\csname \font:fam/outline \endcsname} (where \font:fam stores the current family). Then every font package would define the features that it implements. For example, the package times could define: \times/boldness#1 \times/outline \times/smallcaps \times/mediumcaps . . . Latex would also keep track of the encoding and size, to be stored, for example, in \fam:enc and \fam:size. But it does nothing more than storing them. Each font package would make use of them in the definition of its \<fam>/<feature> commands. This allows each family to implement the substitution and orthogonality mechanism that it considers better suited for it, as well as definig missing usual features as substitution+warning (of substitution+error). For example, a family foo that is itself calligraphic, could define \foo/italic to issue a warning and do nothing (continue without any font change), just in case a user uses (or uses a macro that makes use of) the command \italic while typesetting text with that font. This scheme does not prevent Latex from suppling useful commands for the definitions of the fam-feature commands (\DeclareFontAxis, \DeclareFontFeature, or whatever). Nor would the list of standard features be closed (as is not the LICR). Time to sleep, bye. Javier A.