Re: TECH: Testing again
From: | John Cowan <jcowan@...> |
Date: | Tuesday, November 18, 2003, 19:53 |
JS Bangs scripsit:
> Mozilla doesn't use separate fonts for monotonic and polytonic Greek. It
> actually doesn't allow you to set more than one font for separate unicode
> ranges at all--there's only one Unicode font, which had better contain
> characters for whatever ranges you want. This is clearly sub-optimal.
Actually, Moz and related browsers will search the entire font list to
grab any font that contains the character needed. This can produce a
rAnSOMe nOTe effect, but it's still better than ye olde boxes.
> * All of the lowercase plain characters appear as uppercase characters
> * All of the uppercase characters appear as random mathematical symbols
This suggests that an Adobe-style Symbol font is being used instead of a
proper Greek font.
> This is true in both of the browsers I have installed (Mozilla and
> Konqueror). This suggests some kind of system-wide fontmap problem, which
> I might have to look elsewhere to fix.
Font management is one of the remaining weak places in Linux.
I still haven't been able to persuade my system not to display Cyrillic
characters fullwidth from some Japanese font or other.
--
"While staying with the Asonu, I met a man from John Cowan
the Candensian plane, which is very much like jcowan@reutershealth.com
ours, only more of it consists of Toronto." http://:www.ccil.org/~cowan
--the unnamed narrator of Le Guin's _Changing Planes_