
9th April 2007, 15:55
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Using Sharp Fonts On A GNOME Desktop
Falko
I've followed your instructions on using the MS fonts (as well as copying the Tahoma fonts over to Ubuntu). However, everything goes good until I change over to the Tahoma fonts. What happens is instead of seeing better looking text on the screen, I get block symbols all across the screen (instead of letters/words). At first I thought I had a corrupt font file so I re-copied it again from a different Windows machine and went through the process again and the same result. I'm running Ubuntu v6.10 (not the 7.04 beta release). To get around this I changed things over to Sans with a 8 pt font. Not the same but usable. Any ideas on what would cause this issue and/or is there a possible fix/work around.
Ben
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9th April 2007, 23:04
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I guess it is a problem with your locales. Which locale do you use on your linux workstation?
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10th April 2007, 06:36
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Till
The locale used is:
en_GB.UTF-8
Ben
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10th April 2007, 15:35
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That's the same locale I use on my system...
You can run
Code:
sudo dpkg-reconfigure locales
and select iso8859-1 instead of UTF8. Maybe that changes the behaviour.
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11th April 2007, 16:04
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Falko
Thanks for the input. I'll re-install v6.10 tonight. I did a Ubuntu v7.04 install and your guide worked flawlessly. But I'll try again with the v6.10 tonight and letcha know it goes (as I want to test something else out as well).
Ben
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11th April 2007, 23:06
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Falko
Well, I've re-installed Ubuntu v6.10 onto my computer and followed your How-To and it's worked perfectly this time around. The only thing I can think of is that I missed a step in your How-To which caused this to go haywire a bit. Anyway, thanks for the How-To!
Ben
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26th April 2007, 21:01
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by falko
That's the same locale I use on my system...
You can run
Code:
sudo dpkg-reconfigure locales
and select iso8859-1 instead of UTF8. Maybe that changes the behaviour.
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Generating locales...
en_AU.UTF-8... done
en_BW.UTF-8... done
en_CA.UTF-8... done
en_DK.UTF-8... done
en_GB.UTF-8... done
en_HK.UTF-8... done
en_IE.UTF-8... done
en_IN.UTF-8... done
en_NZ.UTF-8... done
en_PH.UTF-8... done
en_SG.UTF-8... done
en_US.UTF-8... up-to-date
en_ZA.UTF-8... done
en_ZW.UTF-8... done
Generation complete.
What do you mean select iso... ?
Where? How? I still show blocks on Tahoma
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27th April 2007, 14:49
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When you run
Code:
sudo dpkg-reconfigure locales
, you can s lect iso8859-1.
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27th April 2007, 15:29
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by falko
That's the same locale I use on my system...
You can run
Code:
sudo dpkg-reconfigure locales
and select iso8859-1 instead of UTF8. Maybe that changes the behaviour.
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That works a little bit different on Ubuntu.
Have a look here for example:
http://blog.andrewbeacock.com/2007/0...locale-on.html
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Hans
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13th July 2007, 08:13
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Another way to sharpen
I run Gnome with Verdana 10pt as default font for everything. To my eyes, text looks very clean and sharp if my settings (System/Preferences/Font) are:
Font Rendering: Monochrome
(Details) Smoothing: None
(Details) Hinting: Full.
I wonder how this compares with falko's tweaking and Tahoma?
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