$ fc-list | sed 's,:.*,,' | sort -ulists everything except Type1 directory contents.Meanwhile fc-cache searches and caches /usr/share/fonts/Type1$ xlsfonts|grep nimbus shows the font.% xset q
/.../
Font Path:
/usr/share/fonts/100dpi,/usr/share/fonts/75dpi/,/usr/share/fonts/cyrillic/,/usr/share/fonts/local/,/usr/share/fonts/misc/,/usr/share/fonts/TTF/,/usr/share/fonts/Type1/
I have accidentally deleted some of the fonts from /usr/share/fonts folder. They must have been crucial since now I have various display problems ( underscore and font size display ).
I have already tried resetting gnome and system fonts settings but it does not solve the problem.
Did you see Ivan's font topic: http://crunchbang.org/forums/viewtopic.php?id=18249 ?After you installed the fonts, did you rebuild the font cache?BlackIvan wrote:If you want to install some new fonts, especially bitmap fonts from outside the repos put them under ~/.fonts or for system wide use under /usr/share/fonts.
I need to install more than 100 fonts, so I was wondering if there is an easy way to do this task?
I just installed my Windows fonts like I normally do(/usr/share/fonts/truetype/fonts). I did sudo fc-cache -f -v and restarted. When I logged on and went too Google there were no fonts on the page. I tried other websites such as this forum, Neowin and Bing. All didn't have fonts. FontyPython said "Font may be bad and cannot be drawn."
I have a PDF in which the TrueType font OCRB is used, however the font is not embedded.
So I tried to install the font on my system (which is by the way a SLES11 SP2), I did the following things:
Double Clicked the font on gnome Desktop and clicked install
Copied it in the /user/home/username/.fonts folder
Copied it in the /usr/share/fonts
With root: SuSEconfig --module fonts
fc-cache
When I
I think what you can try is to symlink one of those files into /etc/fonts/conf.d, and see if your fonts look better afterward.To set to try BGR,ln -s /etc/fonts/conf.avail/10-sub-pixel-bgr.conf /etc/fonts/conf.dAlso, it may be your desktop environment will let you set this instead of symlinking. I know KDE lets you select subpixel order, as well as xfce4. Probably gnome as well,
Recently, I have found out how to install sharp fonts on my Fedora 11 (I am using it since fedora 9). The instruction is very simple and straightforward (see sharpfonts.com). But after all my fonts changed, my login screen became fully unreadable - all labels are displayed as squares. I've tried the same guide on the fresh fedora 11 install and it work perfectly.
You seem to have quite a few fonts from the AUR. I have no idea if it would help, but I know I would try removing the 'ttf-unifrakture' package.As I wrote above, I don't use Gnome so my suggestions could be very wrong. Are you using a custom theme, from outside the main repos? Do you have the DejaVu fonts installed so that there's a sane fallback to match any