Hello All Sorry, if my question is elementary. I have installed Persian fonts. Is there a way to configure the system to use a special font as the system default font? I can view and edit text using installed fonts, but I don't know how I can specify a font to be the default one. (For example, in desktop environments or widgets' captions.)
Best Regards Ali
On 2/27/07, Ali Majdzadeh ali.majdzadeh@gmail.com wrote:
Sorry, if my question is elementary.
You dont need to be sorry... Its better to ask questions than to remain in darkness :)
I have installed Persian fonts. Is
there a way to configure the system to use a special font as the system default font? I can view and edit text using installed fonts, but I don't know how I can specify a font to be the default one. (For example, in desktop environments or widgets' captions.)
You can check /etc/sysconfig/i18n file Also, try running gnome-font-properties and see if it helps :)
Regards, Makuchaku http://www.makuchaku.info/blog
Hello Mayank Thanks for your help. I am going to test it.
Best Regards Ali
On 2/27/07, mayank jain mayank.gnu@gmail.com wrote:
On 2/27/07, Ali Majdzadeh ali.majdzadeh@gmail.com wrote:
Sorry, if my question is elementary.
You dont need to be sorry... Its better to ask questions than to remain in darkness :)
I have installed Persian fonts. Is
there a way to configure the system to use a special font as the system default font? I can view and edit text using installed fonts, but I
don't
know how I can specify a font to be the default one. (For example, in desktop environments or widgets' captions.)
You can check /etc/sysconfig/i18n file Also, try running gnome-font-properties and see if it helps :)
Regards, Makuchaku http://www.makuchaku.info/blog
-- Fedora-i18n-list mailing list Fedora-i18n-list@redhat.com https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-i18n-list
Hello Mayank I tested the instructions you had mentioned. I managed to solve the problem in GNOME (Using gnome-font-properties). By the way, I modified the /etc/sysconfig/i18n file as follows:
LANG="fa_IR.UTF-8" SUPPORTED="fa_IR.UTF-8:fa_IR:fa" SYSFONT="Roya"
Is there any system-wide configuration file that can be used to store font information so that all the environments (KDE, GNOME, Xfce, ...) behave consistent with regard to font issues? For example, what is the configuration file that gnome-font-properties uses? What is the equivalent of that file in KDE or Xfce? By using gnome-font-properties, I changed all the fonts to "Roya" font and GNOME properly modified and used that font instead of all the other fonts; but KDE didn't; it still uses another font for displaying Persian text ("Homa" font).
Best Regards Ali
On 2/27/07, mayank jain mayank.gnu@gmail.com wrote:
On 2/27/07, Ali Majdzadeh ali.majdzadeh@gmail.com wrote:
Sorry, if my question is elementary.
You dont need to be sorry... Its better to ask questions than to remain in darkness :)
I have installed Persian fonts. Is
there a way to configure the system to use a special font as the system default font? I can view and edit text using installed fonts, but I
don't
know how I can specify a font to be the default one. (For example, in desktop environments or widgets' captions.)
You can check /etc/sysconfig/i18n file Also, try running gnome-font-properties and see if it helps :)
Regards, Makuchaku http://www.makuchaku.info/blog
-- Fedora-i18n-list mailing list Fedora-i18n-list@redhat.com https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-i18n-list
On 2/27/07, Ali Majdzadeh ali.majdzadeh@gmail.com wrote:
I tested the instructions you had mentioned. I managed to solve the problem in GNOME (Using gnome-font-properties). By the way, I modified the /etc/sysconfig/i18n file as follows:
LANG="fa_IR.UTF-8" SUPPORTED="fa_IR.UTF-8:fa_IR:fa" SYSFONT="Roya"
Thats nice :)
Is there any system-wide configuration file that can be used to store font information so that all the environments (KDE, GNOME, Xfce, ...) behave consistent with regard to font issues? For example, what is the configuration file that gnome-font-properties uses? What is the equivalent of that file in KDE or Xfce? By using gnome-font-properties, I changed all the fonts to "Roya" font and GNOME properly modified and used that font instead of all the other fonts; but KDE didn't; it still uses another font for displaying Persian text ("Homa" font).
Try having a look at /etc/fonts/fonts.conf for all users & ~/.fonts.conf for the local user.
I hope it helps :) Regards, Makuchaku http://www.makuchaku.info
Hi Mayank Thanks for your response. I think, I should investigate more on /etc/fonts. I checked that directory. There are different subdirectories out there, and also some xml files. I am going to check those files. Thanks a lot for your guidance.
Best Regards Ali
On 2/27/07, mayank jain mayank.gnu@gmail.com wrote:
On 2/27/07, Ali Majdzadeh ali.majdzadeh@gmail.com wrote:
I tested the instructions you had mentioned. I managed to solve the
problem
in GNOME (Using gnome-font-properties). By the way, I modified the /etc/sysconfig/i18n file as follows:
LANG="fa_IR.UTF-8" SUPPORTED="fa_IR.UTF-8:fa_IR:fa" SYSFONT="Roya"
Thats nice :)
Is there any system-wide configuration file that can be used to store
font
information so that all the environments (KDE, GNOME, Xfce, ...) behave consistent with regard to font issues? For example, what is the configuration file that gnome-font-properties uses? What is the
equivalent
of that file in KDE or Xfce? By using gnome-font-properties, I changed all the fonts to "Roya" font
and
GNOME properly modified and used that font instead of all the other
fonts;
but KDE didn't; it still uses another font for displaying Persian text ("Homa" font).
Try having a look at /etc/fonts/fonts.conf for all users & ~/.fonts.conf for the local user.
I hope it helps :) Regards, Makuchaku http://www.makuchaku.info
-- Fedora-i18n-list mailing list Fedora-i18n-list@redhat.com https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-i18n-list
On 2/28/07, Ali Majdzadeh ali.majdzadeh@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Mayank Thanks for your response. I think, I should investigate more on /etc/fonts. I checked that directory. There are different subdirectories out there, and also some xml files. I am going to check those files. Thanks a lot for your guidance.
I'm glad that I was of some help :)
Regards, Makuchaku
Hello Sorry, for my late response. I checked everything, but unfortunately I could not manage to solve the problem. I still do not know how to configure the X environment in order to use a special font when I use Persian (Farsi).
Regards Ali
2007/2/28, mayank jain mayank.gnu@gmail.com:
On 2/28/07, Ali Majdzadeh ali.majdzadeh@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Mayank Thanks for your response. I think, I should investigate more on
/etc/fonts.
I checked that directory. There are different subdirectories out there,
and
also some xml files. I am going to check those files. Thanks a lot for your guidance.
I'm glad that I was of some help :)
Regards, Makuchaku
-- Fedora-i18n-list mailing list Fedora-i18n-list@redhat.com https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-i18n-list
Sorry, for my late response. I checked everything, but unfortunately I could not manage to solve the problem. I still do not know how to configure the X environment in order to use a special font when I use Persian (Farsi).
I am not sure how easy it is to solve this problem.
I would suggest trying to ask on fedora-fonts-list where there are some people more familiar with Arabic fonts and probably aware of this problem.
Jens
i18n@lists.stg.fedoraproject.org