BIN to T11 Converter

MacBinary to TeX Type 1 font conversion — free online

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TeX-Ready Fonts

T11 integrates seamlessly with TeX and LaTeX systems. Converting from BIN gives you a font format purpose-built for academic typesetting.

Fully Online

No software to download or configure. The BIN to T11 converter runs entirely in your browser — visit Convertio and start converting.

Multi-File Processing

Need several fonts converted? Upload your BIN collection and process them all to T11 in one batch session on Convertio.

How to convert BIN to T11

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose t11 or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your t11 file right afterwards

About formats

BIN refers to MacBinary-encoded font files, a transfer format that preserves classic Macintosh file system features when moving data across platforms. Classic Mac OS stored fonts using the resource fork — a secondary data stream invisible to non-Mac systems — which meant that simply copying a Mac font to a Windows PC or Unix server would strip the actual font data entirely. MacBinary solves this by combining both the data fork and resource fork into a single flat file with a 128-byte header containing the original HFS metadata. In the font context, BIN files typically wrap TrueType suitcase fonts, PostScript Type 1 LWFN outline files, or bitmap NFNT font resources. The format was first specified in 1985 by Dennis Brothers and collaborators from the early Mac community, with MacBinary II following around 1987 and MacBinary III arriving in 1996 to support longer filenames. A key advantage is lossless preservation: every byte of the original Mac font file survives intact through email, FTP, or cross-platform file sharing, including creator and type codes that identify the font format. The single-file packaging is another practical strength — rather than dealing with separate data and resource streams, users and automated systems handle one portable container. Although modern macOS has moved away from resource forks and Mac fonts now typically ship as OTF, TTF, or DFONT files, BIN remains important for accessing archived font collections from the classic Mac era.
Developer: Dennis Brothers
Initial release: 1985
T11 (Type 11) is a PostScript font type defined by Adobe Systems as part of the CID-keyed font architecture, combining CID glyph addressing with TrueType outline data wrapped in a Type 42 PostScript shell. In Adobe's font type numbering, Types 9, 10, and 11 are CID-keyed counterparts to Types 1, 3, and 42 respectively — so Type 11 is essentially a CID-keyed Type 42, designed for TrueType fonts that contain very large glyph sets, particularly CJK (Chinese, Japanese, Korean) character collections. The format allows PostScript interpreters with TrueType rasterizer support to render CJK TrueType fonts while using CID numeric indexing instead of glyph names, which is critical for character sets numbering in the tens of thousands. Glyph outlines remain in native TrueType quadratic spline format, preserving the original hinting instructions, while the CID layer provides efficient glyph access and subsetting through CMap resources. One advantage is direct TrueType rendering quality — unlike converting TrueType outlines to PostScript cubics, Type 11 passes the original outlines to the rasterizer intact, preserving hand-tuned grid-fitting instructions. The CID indexing provides another benefit by supporting multiple encoding schemes (Unicode, national standards) mapped to the same glyph collection without data duplication. Type 11 fonts appear primarily in professional CJK print production and PDF document workflows where large TrueType-based character sets must be embedded in PostScript-derived output.
Developer: Adobe Systems
Initial release: 1993

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert BIN to T11?

T11 is a TeX-compatible Type 1 format. Converting from BIN prepares your PostScript font for use in LaTeX and TeX-based typesetting.

How to open T11 files?

T11 files are used by TeX distributions like TeX Live and MiKTeX. Font editors like FontForge also recognize and can open them.

Who needs BIN to T11 conversion?

Academics, publishers, and typographers who use TeX/LaTeX for document preparation and need specific PostScript fonts in their work.

Does conversion work on all operating systems?

Yes — Convertio is browser-based and works on Windows, macOS, Linux, and mobile devices without requiring any software to install.

Can I convert a batch of BIN fonts?

Upload several BIN files simultaneously. Set T11 as the target and convert them all at once with Convertio batch processing.