I was always taught to use the install procedure.
It use to be that you can have fonts in that folder, but not being used
by you system. I am glad that that as been removed.
It is alway good to looks at the fonts with a font viewer just before
you install them, so you make sure they are the ones you want. I have
accidentally installed a bunch of fonts that were not useful to me, when
I was dealing with XP and Vista systems on a regular basis. Now I use
Ubuntu on my desktop first and Win XP and Win7 on laptops, as needed.
On 02/25/2013 01:21 PM, Virgil Arrington wrote:
When I install fonts to my Win7 computer, I just copy the font files
to the "C:\windows\fonts" folder using Windows Explorer. I've never
had a problem doing it this way.
Virgil
-----Original Message----- From: webmaster-Kracked_P_P
Sent: Monday, February 25, 2013 12:48 PM
To: users@global.libreoffice.org
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Does Libre Office have its own
distinct setof fonts?
For Win7 systems - you can see them through Control Panel > All Control
Panel Items > Fonts
which was on the left hand side of the window.
Now you can delete the fonts by right clicking on it and using the
delete option[s].
To install fonts, you must have the font setting to NOT make a "link" to
the font. That is always trouble.
So from there, you just have a list of fonts in a "working folder" and
right click on the font[s] you want to install and use the "install"
option.
That is how I do this.
The only issue is you will need to know what fonts all of you packages
use so you do not delete any needed ones. For myself, I have over 200
"items" listed on my Win7 laptop and over 500 font files in my .fonts
folder on my Ubuntu desktop.
On 02/25/2013 12:29 PM, anne-ology wrote:
yikes ;-(
and the proper way for WIN7 would be ??? ;-)
I was just about to check into finding more then plopping
them in;
now I'll wait for further instructions.
yep ... I think this 'glorified typewriter' is making me 'feel
stupider & stupider' ...
On Sat, Feb 23, 2013 at 8:25 PM, webmaster-Kracked_P_P <
webmas...@krackedpress.com> wrote:
For the Windows users, and the Linux users, you really should use
the font
install procedures.
For Windows, there should be a font listing in its Control Panel and
a way
to install fonts there.
For Ubuntu users, all you have to do in click on the font and it should
open the font installation window with the "install" button. That
way you
can see the font before you install it. I like that better than
"dumping"
the font into the hidden ".fonts" folder. This is mostly the fonts you
install after the fact and not ones installed by the OS.
If you are never going to use any non-English language, then do
this. . .
Open LibreOffice and scroll down the list of fonts in the font
drop-box in
the "formatting" toolbar.
Look at the fonts that have a name on the left and glyphs on the right.
This will show for "dinbats" and icon based fonts. ALSO it will
show you
glyphs for the non-English/non-Latin style of fonts.
Think Arabic or an Asian language.
At that point, write down all of the font names that have these
fonts you
do not want. Then go to a package that has a font viewer and search
for
the fonts, if the is no file name that matches. I have a bunch of
fonts
like that.
To be honest, there are other places that hold the fonts for Ubuntu, so
you will have to search for then. BE CAREFUL not to remove any
folders or
delete them permanently since you might have removed a needed for
for one
of your packages. My install of Ubuntu has many Middle Eastern and
Asian
fonts installed by default, even though I use English for my
language. I
may remove most of them someday, but it will be a slow process so I
do not
make any mistakes. If you use Ubuntu, use the Software Center and
look at
the font packages installed. Then remove those that are not part of
your
language, like India or Arabic for English.
On 02/23/2013 08:23 PM, anne-ology wrote:
Thanks!!!
On Sat, Feb 23, 2013 at 7:15 PM, Doug <dmcgarr...@optonline.net>
wrote:
On 02/23/2013 07:40 PM, anne-ology wrote:
Thank you for responding;
but I haven't the foggiest idea what you've said.
the font directory of the distro ??? ... AAMOF ???
I would really enjoy getting rid of all those 'junk'
fonts ...
and
finding then dropping in the good ones;
but I haven't a clue as to how to so do.
ok, it's probably some simple step to locate these then
drop them
into whatever folder ...
but 'the more I learn of these glorified
typewriters, the
stupider I feel' ;-) ;-) ;-)
AAMOF=as a matter of fact
You will find a bunch of directories labelled fonts. You want one
that
has
a list of
fonts showing as subdirectories. In my distro (pclos) they're in
/usr/share:
[doug@linux1 fonts]$ ls -la
total 184
drwxr-xr-x 17 root root 4096 Feb 19 00:22 ./
drwxr-xr-x 266 root root 12288 Feb 22 12:04 ../
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 98304 Jun 8 2011 100dpi/
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Jun 8 2011 75dpi/
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Jun 8 2011 cyrillic/
drwxr-xr-x 4 root root 4096 Sep 22 2011 default/
drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 4096 Jun 8 2011 encodings/
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Feb 22 12:07 java/
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 20480 Jun 8 2011 misc/
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Jun 8 2011 OTF/
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Jun 8 2011 Speedo/
drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 4096 Feb 19 00:22 truetype/
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Aug 20 2012 ttf/
drwxr-xr-x 4 root root 4096 Jun 8 2011 TTF/
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Jun 8 2011 Type1/
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Jun 12 2011 ubuntu/
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Oct 16 2010 webcore/
Notice the names: three sets of true-types, a type 1, even
cyrillic, if you happen to use Russian! All of the Latin letters
can be modified with accent marks, etc. if you make a
compose key. You'll also have some signs, like €, ¢, ₤,
½, ¼, ß (German ess-tset) and whatever.
I thought I saw, somewhere in this thread, someone who
told where to get the Microsoft fonts--these are True-Tupe,
or ttf, and have the kind of fonts you want so as to look
professional in whatever you write. BTW, do _not_
remove the old font directory without having one at
hand to replace it with, because if you do, there will be
absolutely _nothing_ readable in any program! As I
have said, all the programs on the system use the
fonts in that font directory. There might be one or two
exceptions, but more likely not. You don't have to
remove the old font directory--you can just drop the
new fonts in with the old, and you'll just have a bigger
list to choose from. I dumped it, because I thought the
existing ones in Mint were basically useless.
If you have a search routine in your email, search for ms,
I think that's the abbreviation the previous poster used,
when telling how to get Microsoft fonts. They're free, you
don't have to buy them.
Hope that helps. --doug
On Sat, Feb 23, 2013 at 6:20 PM, Doug <dmcgarr...@optonline.net>
wrote:
On 02/23/2013 06:22 PM, anne-ology wrote:
Then how does one get these new ones into the programs
for use?
As you quoted me before, you weren't reading what I said: put
the
ffonts in the font directory of your distro. they should then be
available for any program on the machine, including LO. That's
just what I did on the Mint installation. AAMOF, I deleted all
the crap fonts that were on the machine--Liberation and a
whole batch of Asian fonts in languages I couldn't even recognize--
and just dumped in a whole directory of usable fonts--probably
True-Type, supplied on another distro that wasn't so damned PC.
--doug
On Thu, Feb 21, 2013 at 2:35 PM, Doug <dmcgarr...@optonline.net>
wrote:
On 02/21/2013 12:30 PM, webmaster-Kracked_P_P wrote:
On 02/21/2013 12:01 PM, Paddy Landau wrote:
I am wondering if Libre Office has a separate set of fonts
from
the
operating system, or at least some of the fonts.
I'll explain my problem.
If I have a look at Character Map to find a character that I
want
(let's
say
it is an aeroplane), I can find it in the Webdings font (Unicode
00d2, or
Ò). See screenshot 1:
<http://nabble.**documentfound**ation.org/file/**<http://documentfoundation.org/file/**>
n4039236/Character_Map.png<
http://nabble.**documentfoundation.org/file/**
n4039236/Character_Map.png<http://nabble.documentfoundation.org/file/n4039236/Character_Map.png>
But when I use that character in Libre Office and set the
font to
Webdings,
it shows a different character, specifically an in-box. See
screenshot 2:
<http://nabble.**
documentfoundation.org/file/****n4039236/Libre_Office_**<http://documentfoundation.org/file/**n4039236/Libre_Office_**>
characters.png<
http://nabble.**documentfoundation.org/file/**
n4039236/Libre_Office_**characters.png<http://nabble.documentfoundation.org/file/n4039236/Libre_Office_characters.png>
Note that not all characters do this. For example, the first 52
characters
(A-Z and a-z) are correct.
I would like to know how to solve this discrepancy, so that I
can
search
for
characters in Character Map (or an equivalent program) and
then use
them
in
Libre Office. (I have tried an alternative program, Specimen
Font
Viewer,
and it shows the same thing as Character Map.)
I am using Linux Ubuntu 12.04 (64-bit, fully updated) with Libre
Office
4.0.0.3 (installed directly from the Libre Office website).
Thank you.
My 12.04 shows a list of fonts at
/opt/libreoffice4.0/share/****fonts/truetype/
They are mostly "DejaVu" and "Liberation" fonts but there are
others
listed as well.
I made sure the fonts listed there were also listed in the
/.fonts/
hidden folder. that way I had the same fonts for all my
packages.
I was recently looking at Mint, a derivative of Ubuntu,
and I was
appalled at the paucity of fonts. "Liberation" is ugly!
You need
to
find a
good
set of True-Type fonts and install them. Then you can have, for
example,
Times-Roman. And most of the odd-ball ones that you might use
once in your life-time. I copied the entire fonts directory
from PCLOS
and
replaced the one in Mint. But I think you can get True-Type from
Microsoft, free. Not sure how you do that--Google's your friend.
--doug
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