XFree86 Font De-uglification HOWTO | ||
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Unfortunately there is no unified font handling system for Linux. You will have to configure each individual program so you can use TrueType, Type 1 or fonts that pique your fancy. And each program may well have its own way of doing this so you will have to RTFM. Desktop Environments like Gnome and KDE may provide much of this functionality.
Most GUI apps should be able to use TrueType, and Type 1 fonts too. Wordperfect for Linux, however, cannot use TrueType. (See the links section below for more on Wordperfect.) Text editors, terminal programs and the like need fixed width fonts, and do not play well with TrueType or other scalable fonts.
Though not discussed here, Type 1 fonts provide many of the same benefits as TrueType and are historically better supported in the Unix world. You likely have many of these installed already. Unfortunately however, Type 1 are not a web standard like TrueType. But they are suitable for many other purposes. They are where it's at for printing. See ghostscriptfor more on this.
While it is possible to specify a default point size for the xfs font server, very few applications will actually use this value.
Abiword comes with a suite of fonts, called 'Abisuite'. Apparently, some of these fonts have the same names as some of the well known MS TrueType fonts: Arial, etc. And apparently, these are of much less quality. And because of the way X searches for fonts, it may find these first and use these, even if the 'real' ones are installed and may be the preferred choice. The solution is to uninstall 'Abisuite'.
The new Xft rendering extensions of XFree86 4.x will mostly supplant similar features as provided by xfs, and older XFree86 extensions. For instance, font aliasing should be done in XftConfig if the new extensions are being used. This would only be true where the application is built against a toolkit (like QT or GTK) that supports the new extensions. At this time, there are not many apps that do support this yet.
The Video Timings HOWTO, the ins and outs of getting the most from your monitor.
Font HOWTO Many good tips for installing fonts and for applications such as StarOffice, Applixware, Wordperfect, Ghostscript, TeX/LaTeX.
A TrueType HOWTO, good tips for printing, and a few application specific tips.
xfsft Homepage, TrueType font support for X. This is the origin of the "freetype" font module for XFree86 4.x, and Redhat's xfs. Good site, and good links to other information related to fonts and TrueType.
Some Linux for Beginners. Great font site, and other Linux topics. Covers many of the topics discussed here in more detail. Some font and other tips for Mozilla: http://home.c2i.net/dark/My_Mozilla_FAQ.html.
X-TrueType Homepage, and yet another TrueType Font server, especially good for Japanese, Chinese and Korean character sets.
Tips on font size problems from Netscape.
Wordperfect for Linux -- Fonts and Printers by Rod Smith, the author of Using Corel Wordperfect 8 for Linux from Que. Excellent information on Wordperfect and where TrueType fits in.
XFree86 Project, the guys and gals who do an incredible amount of work to give us a killer GUI environment. Some info on fonts in XFree86 4.x.
Microsoft Web Fonts direct from the Lion's den -- and they are free! These can be unpacked in Linux (see above).
Web Fonts RPM package, contains a few of the MS web browser fonts. http://packages.debian.org/unstable/graphics/msttcorefonts.html is a similar package for Debian.
Sebastiano Vigna's http://freshmeat.net//webFonts4Linux automates the downloading, extracting and installation of the Microsoft fonts all in one neat package.
Freeware Connection -- Free Fonts Sites lots of links to lots of sites.
Bitstream's Geometric Slabserif TrueType Font.
Two converters for converting a Mac Font "suitcase" to a *nix compatible font: http://www.macinsearch.com/infomac2/font/util/tt-converter-15.html and http://www.netmagic.net/~evan/shareware/#TTFontConvert
The Unicode HOWTO: http://linuxdoc.org/HOWTO/Unicode-HOWTO.html
Two sources of 'free' TrueType fonts with large Unicode support are Bitstream Cyberbit, which covers Roman, Cyrillic, Greek, Hebrew, Arabic, combining diacritical marks, Chinese, Korean, Japanese, and more, and is available from ftp://ftp.netscape.com/pub/communicator/extras/fonts/windows/Cyberbit.ZIP. And Lucida Sans Unicode, which is included in IBM's JDK 1.3.0beta for Linux, and covers Roman, Cyrillic, Greek, Hebrew, combining diacritical marks. This can be downloaded from ftp://ftp.maths.tcd.ie/Linux/opt/IBMJava2-13/jre/lib/fonts/ as LucidaSansRegular.ttf and LucidaSansOblique.ttf. Thanks to Tzafrir Cohen for these references. He also has a nice page on Hebrew fonts and related topics at http://www.iglu.org.il/faq/?file=133.