Re: character display quality difference between users.

2019-12-21 Thread George N. White III
On Sat, 21 Dec 2019 at 02:32, Samuel Sieb wrote: > > I'm guessing that you've somehow got a different font in the one > account. I know in the past if I got an email or some text with a > Chinese or similar character encoding, the English characters would look > as you described them. > Makes s

Re: character display quality difference between users. [SOLVED]

2019-12-21 Thread home user
(replying to Tom's Sat., 12/21 second message) > Probably the fontforge directory doesn't matter (just guessing), > but maybe the fonts.conf file in the cn.user is screwing something up? > You could try renaming it, then logging back in and see if the fonts get better. That was it!  Fixed!  Th

Re: character display quality difference between users.

2019-12-21 Thread Tom Horsley
On Sat, 21 Dec 2019 09:48:45 -0700 home user wrote: > What's my next step? Probably the fontforge directory doesn't matter (just guessing), but maybe the fonts.conf file in the cn.user is screwing something up? You could try renaming it, then logging back in and see if the fonts get better. _

Re: character display quality difference between users.

2019-12-21 Thread home user
My third attempt (about 9am US mountain time) to reply to Ed apparently disappeared. This time, I'll try using HYPERKITTY instead of Thunderbird. > On 2019-12-20 01:47, home user wrote: > > I don't generally use GNOME.  And I don't have an F30 VM.  Only F31. > > I just created a new user on m

Re: character display quality difference between users.

2019-12-21 Thread home user
(replying to Tom's 12/20 post) > Check any ~/.config/*font* directories for different contents. bash.5[.config]: ls -a *font* kcmfonts  kfontinstuirc fontconfig: .  .. fontforge: .  ..  autosave  FontsOpenAtLastQuit  hotkeys  prefs  python bash.6[.config]: [for cn.user] bash.4[.config]: ls -a

Re: character display quality difference between users.

2019-12-21 Thread home user
(replaying to Samuel's Sat. 12/21 post) > What does "localectl" and "locale" show in each account? [for en.user] bash.1[~]: localectl    System Locale: LANG=en_US.UTF-8    VC Keymap: us   X11 Layout: n/a bash.2[~]: locale LANG=en_US.utf8 LC_CTYPE="en_US.utf8" LC_NUMERIC=en_US.utf8 LC_TIME

Re: character display quality difference between users.

2019-12-21 Thread home user
(Saturday, 12-21, about 9am US mountain time) Last night at about 9pm, I replied to Ed.  My account is set up to receive an automated reply when the list receives my post: - (from) users-boun...@lists.fedoraproject.org (subject) users post acknowledgment (body) Your message entitled [whatev

Re: character display quality difference between users.

2019-12-21 Thread Tom Horsley
On Fri, 20 Dec 2019 22:31:53 -0800 Samuel Sieb wrote: > I'm guessing that you've somehow got a different font in the one > account. Check any ~/.config/*font* directories for different contents. ___ users mailing list -- users@lists.fedoraproject.org T

Re: character display quality difference between users.

2019-12-20 Thread Samuel Sieb
On 12/20/19 6:09 PM, home user wrote: (on Friday, Dec. 20, Samuel said) > What is the significance of "en.user" and "cn.user", The "cn.user" is used mostly for learning Chinese: vocabulary files, flashcards (LibreOffice), and grammar exercises (text files and a C++ program). The "en.user" is

Re: character display quality difference between users.

2019-12-20 Thread Ed Greshko
On 2019-12-20 01:47, home user wrote: > When logged in as en.user, characters displayed in terminals, in window > titles, in the settings tools, and other places are displayed with good > quality. > > When logged in as cn.user, characters displayed in terminals, in window > titles, in the settin

Re: character display quality difference between users.

2019-12-20 Thread home user
(on Friday, Dec. 20, Samuel said) > What is the significance of "en.user" and "cn.user", The "cn.user" is used mostly for learning Chinese: vocabulary files, flashcards (LibreOffice), and grammar exercises (text files and a C++ program). The "en.user" is used for almost everything else. > sin

Re: character display quality difference between users.

2019-12-20 Thread Samuel Sieb
On 12/19/19 9:47 AM, home user wrote: When logged in as en.user, characters displayed in terminals, in window titles, in the settings tools, and other places are displayed with good quality. When logged in as cn.user, characters displayed in terminals, in window titles, in the settings tools,

character display quality difference between users.

2019-12-19 Thread home user
(fedora-30; Gnome 3.32.2) When logged in as en.user, characters displayed in terminals, in window titles, in the settings tools, and other places are displayed with good quality. When logged in as cn.user, characters displayed in terminals, in window titles, in the settings tools, and other