This removes the slant/italic variable axis and breaks up the font in two: roman and italic. This change will allow diverging designs for italic (for example single-storey a). It also addresses the fact that most software, including web browsers, doesn't handle VFs with slnt or ital well.
32 lines
1.1 KiB
Text
32 lines
1.1 KiB
Text
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Installing on Linux:
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There are many different Linux distributions and some handle font management
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differently. These instructions are for the most common Linux distributions:
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1. Create a folder called ".fonts" in your home directory.
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Example: mkdir -p ~/.fonts
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2. Copy the otf files in the "Desktop" folder into your .fonts directory
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Example: cp "Desktop"/*.otf ~/.fonts/
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You may have to restart apps and/or your window server session.
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Again, these instructions are for the most common Linux distributuons like
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Ubuntu and might not apply to you. Refer to the documentation for your
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distribution for more details on how to manage fonts in your OS.
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Q&A
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Q: I installed the fonts but they don't show up
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A: Try rebuilding the font database:
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sudo fc-cache -f -v
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Then restart your program(s).
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Q: Is there a way to tell if Inter was actually installed?
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A: Try running: fc-list | grep "Inter"
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Q: ~/.fonts is an old thing. The new thing is ~/.local/share/fonts
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A: Yes, that is true for recent distributions. These distros usually support
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~/.fonts as well making these instructions work for everyone. Yay.
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