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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]How to use Japanese True Type fonts?
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- Subject: How to use Japanese True Type fonts?
- From: "Stephen J. Turnbull" <turnbull@example.com>
- Date: Tue, 8 Aug 2000 20:40:11 +0900 (JST)
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>>>>> "Mike" == Mike Fabian <mfabian@example.com> writes: Mike> Has anybody tried to use Japanese True Type fonts with Mike> Linux? What is the best way to do this? Which fontserver Mike> can be recommended for that purpose? I've had some success at various times in the past with VFlib and XTT versions of the X Server and/or X Font Server. But they involve nonstandard and (IMO) poorly designed extensions. In particular, they will not be upward compatible with OpenType, which addresses many of the same problems. Mike> http://www.linux.or.jp/~ishikawa/linux/dists/FreeType/xtt-fonts_0.19990222-3.tar.gz Mike> Until now I tried to use these fonts with XFree86-4.0 Mike> (should have support for True Type fonts already build in) Mike> and with the font server 'xfstt' but without any success. Yup. Those are fonts intended for use with the XTT fork of XFree86. Parts of that were attempted to be merged into XFree86 4.0, but not entirely successful. The differences between xfstt and xfs-xtt remained substantial as of January 2000. (I don't know any of this first hand, and I'm not using XFree86 4.0 yet.) Mike> First I tried it with XFree86-4.0. I unpacked the tarball Mike> (which contains the fonts, fonts.dir, and fonts.alias Mike> files), and added the directory to X's fontpath with You might try mv'ing the fonts.* files out of the way and rewriting them to xfstt's satisfaction (by hand, I doubt whether ttmkfdir is capable of dealing with Japanese fonts). They very likely use features of xfs-xtt which were either not merged into xfstt or are still unstable (if there have been recent successes on this front). Mike> Then I deleted the original fonts.dir and fonts.alias and Mike> created a new fonts.dir with the 'ttmkfdir' utility: Mike> mfabian@example.com:~/xtt-fonts-0.19990222$ ttmkfdir > fonts.dir Mike> unknown font foundry code LYJS Mike> unknown font foundry code LYJS Uh-oh.... I noticed that you have 4 pairs of duplicate font names in the fonts.dir output. Is this correct? Mike> Then I tried to use xfstt. I used the option '--unstrap' Mike> when starting 'xfstt' (according to the documentation this Mike> option is necessary to display more then the first 256 Mike> characters in a font) and started the X-server with the Mike> option '-deferglyphs 16' (this is also recommended in the Mike> documentation of xfstt). But nevertheless, 'xfd' did never Mike> show me more than the first 256 characters. Are you sure the fontserver comes earlier in the fontpath? It must be added explicitly. You should also delete the directory from the fontpath so that you know for sure the font is coming from the font server and not the X server. Does the 4.0 version still have --encoding? You probably need that to export jisx0208.1983 if it still does. What is the UNSTRAPLIMIT (compile-time variable) for 4.0? If it's below the kanji, you're not going to have a chance anyway. Mike> Maybe XFree86-4.0 and xfstt are not able to display Japanese Mike> True Type fonts? Dunno. Wouldn't be surprised, although I thought this did work. Mike> Has anybody tried X-TT (http://x-tt.dsl.gr.jp/)? Does this Mike> work better? According to the installation manual of X-TT it Mike> is distributed in form of patches against XFree86 3.3.5, so Mike> maybe this doesn't work with XFree86-4.0 at all? Build the font server separately. I have no problems running both xfstt and xfs-xtt (but I don't have time to play with it and make sure they're actually working at the moment, although they have been simultaneously effective in the past). (The TT fonts packages consistently broke my XF86Config, and XF86 upgrades consistently broke on existing TT fonts. So I gave up....) Rumor had it XTT was in disarray from the attempt to merge with XFree86 (which failed). Just a rumor, though. Those Watanabe fonts are available from the Ghostscript FTP site (ftp.cs.wisc.edu, and maybe SourceForge as well) in source form with utilities to translate them to BDF and Type 1 (actually Type 0) formats (and several others). I occasionally use them in Type 1 format, which works fine (but they're kinda klunky at < 30pt; I prefer the bitmap fonts). -- University of Tsukuba Tennodai 1-1-1 Tsukuba 305-8573 JAPAN Institute of Policy and Planning Sciences Tel/fax: +81 (298) 53-5091 _________________ _________________ _________________ _________________ What are those straight lines for? "XEmacs rules."
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