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			116 lines
		
	
	
		
			4.5 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
| 	Troubleshooting GNU FreeFont
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| 
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| So your text looks lousy, although you installed FreeFont and you seem to be
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| using it.  What do you do?
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| 
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| Before you blame the problem on FreeFont, take the time to double-check that
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| the text you are looking at is really rendered with FreeFont.
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| 
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| Be aware that not all Unicode characters are supported by FreeFont, and
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| even characters supported by one face, such as Serif, might not be
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| supported by other faces such as Sans.
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| 
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| Also, some systems have settings that strongly affect the rendering
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| of fonts.  It may be worth tweaking these.
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| 
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| glyph substitution
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| ==================
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| 
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| When given the task of displaying characters in text, modern font rendering
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| software usually tries to display *something*, even if the font it is
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| *supposed* to be using does not contain glyphs for all the characters in the
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| text.  The software will snoop through all the fonts on the system to find
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| one that has a glyph for the one missing in the desired font.  So although
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| you have specified FreeSans-bold, you may be looking at a letter from quite
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| a different font.
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| 
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| First double-check that the font in question really contains the character
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| in question.  If you don't have font development software, this can be
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| tricky.  In the case of FreeFont, you can check if a given character 
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| range is supported: <http://www.gnu.org/software/freefont/coverage.html>
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| 
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| Next double-check that your application (web browser, text editor, etc)
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| has indeed been properly instructed to use the font.
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| 
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| Then double-check that the font is really installed in the system.
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| (This depends on the operating system, of course.)
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| 
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| Linux and Unix
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| ==============
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| 
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| Modern Linux systems use a system called fontconfig, which maintains a font
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| cache, for efficiency.
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| 
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| The font cache can really complicate font installation and troubleshooting
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| however.  It can happen that when a font is newly installed, what is 
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| displayed is coming out of an old cache entry rather than the new font.
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| 
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| Just what to do depends on how and where the font was installed.
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| 
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| Fonts installed system-wide are usually put in a directory such as
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| 	/usr/share/fonts/
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| the font cache for these might be in
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| 	/var/cache/fontconfig/
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| Fonts installed just for one user account will typically be in
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| 	~/.fonts/
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| and the cache will be
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| 	~/.fontconfig/
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| 
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| You can clean your local cache merely by emptying the directory 
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| 	~/.fontconfig/
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| In any case, to clean the cache, you can use the fontconfig command
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| 	fc-cache -vf
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| If run as root, it will clean the system cache, if run as a normal user,
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| it cleans only the normal user's cache.
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| 
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| The procedure for local fonts is:
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| 	1) shut off any program using the fonts in question
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| 	2) clean the cache
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| 	3) re-start the program
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| The procedure for system-wide fonts is:
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| 	1) log out of the X Windows session
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| 	2) in a console, clean the cache
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| 	3) log in to an X Windows session
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| 
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| LibreOffice / OpenOffice
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| ========================
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| These products have their own font rendering libraries, which have 
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| idiosyncratic behavior.
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| 
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| It has recently been reported that as of LibreOffice 3.5.1, font features
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| are disabled for OpenType fonts.  If you use FreeFont with these products,
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| you may want to install the TrueType versions of the fonts.
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| 
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| Windows
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| =======
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| 
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| The most common complaint has to do with "blurry text".  There are two
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| causes.
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| 
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| The first is that ClearType smoothing is turned off.  The best way to check
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| is to use the native Windows Web browser. Do a search for "ClearType Tuner".
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| The Microsoft pages install a tuner for ClearType. A security block notice
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| will appear at the top of the window--you have to allow the installation.
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| Then check the box "Turn on ClearType".  The change happens immediately.
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| 
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| The secont cause is that the FreeFont version with cubic spline outlines is
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| installed.  As of the 2012 GNU FreeFont release, the TrueType builds have
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| quadratic splines, which work best with Windows' rendering software.
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| 	TTF (TrueType)  quadratic splines Windows 7, Vista, Windows XP.
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| 	OTF (OpenType)  cubic splines     Linux, Mac
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| 
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| Note also: Firefox has a setting for ClearType:
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| 	gfx.font_rendering.cleartype_params.rendering_mode
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| A value of 2 sets it to old-style GDI rendering, while -1 is the default.
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| 
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| reporting problems
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| ==================
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| 
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| If you really think you're seeing a bug in FreeFont, or if you have
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| a suggestion, consider opening a problem report at
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| 	https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?group=freefont
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| It is best that you make a Savannah account and log in with that, so 
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| you can be e-mailed whenever changes are made to your report.
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| 
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| $Id: troubleshooting.txt,v 1.10 2011-07-16 08:38:06 Stevan_White Exp $
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