The Ubuntu font family are a set of matching new libre/open fonts. The development is being funded by Canonical on behalf the wider Free Software community and the Ubuntu project. The technical font design work and implementation is being undertaken by Dalton Maag.

PREAMBLE

This licence allows the licensed fonts to be used, studied, modified and

redistributed freely. The fonts, including any derivative works, can be

bundled, embedded, and redistributed provided the terms of this licence

are met. The fonts and derivatives, however, cannot be released under

any other licence. The requirement for fonts to remain under this

licence does not require any document created using the fonts or their

derivatives to be published under this licence, as long as the primary

purpose of the document is not to be a vehicle for the distribution of

the fonts.


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4) The Font Software, modified or unmodified, in part or in whole, must

be distributed entirely under this licence, and must not be distributed

under any other licence. The requirement for fonts to remain under this

licence does not affect any document created using the Font Software,

except any version of the Font Software extracted from a document

created using the Font Software may only be distributed under this

licence.

The license for this font is the SIL OFL license. This license does not allow us to redistribute derivative versions of the font without wholesale name changes inside and out of the font. Until we figure out a reasonable method of delivering these to you and complying with the license, you will have to use the Webfont Generator yourself on these, renaming the fonts appropriately.

Google Fonts collaborates with type designers, foundries and the design community worldwide to create a directory of open source fonts. The fonts are free to use, making beautiful type accessible to anyone for any project.

I anticipate that the problem might be installing font that turns my Firefox browser turned my mail fonts to bold. I experience the same view with firefox and chrome browser. Many of the fonts turned out to be bold.!

Launch a file manager as sugo (e.g. sudo nautilus) and navigate to /usr/share/fonts. Browse through the opentype and especially the truetype directory, and delete fonts you don't want. (If you really dislike the fonts, press Shift+Delete for extra effect :)

The last time I ran into this issue was with a fresh install of Kubuntu. The number of fonts installed by default was so ridiculous, that various applications would freeze while displaying the font picker.

Talking about fonts-noto-core it includes quite a few high quality and well maintained fonts for many non-latin scripts, and one of my ideas is to propose that also Ubuntu starts to install fonts-noto-core by default.

I do not think that people being able to use local language by default is a bad thing. If that needs fonts pre-packed, that is a necessary act. Allowing people to add non-English / non-Latin characters can be messy. Nothing is as perfect as tuned by default.

This assures backward compatibility, enables choosy users to install only Latin fonts, and is a lot easier to implement than matching font alphabets with the selected locale (that could be the next step).

It is not the user default display language or keyboard input languages that defines which scripts (so the fonts: Unicode range,embedded shaping/style rules beside typeface and family) the user wants to read.

This is opposite to the official instructions but I had this bit wrong at the end which made me question all the font installations. So I suggest you get this configured first and then if you get the fonts working it should magically appear.

Using the default fonts relies on the Powerline font to automatically patch existing fonts. However you can improve the look of the airline symbols by using the patched fonts. These are the equivalents using the patched fonts.

Diversity is good. Ubuntu and Libreoffice do a great job accommodating the international community. But the problem that most users have with excessive fonts are real! Why should a user in South America, who only writes in Spanish, have to deal with hundreds of useless fonts in Chinese, Hindi, or even Hebrew?

On the other hand, who would be affected by not having all the fonts pushed through the installation by default? The most important fonts are the ones used for the installation of the system and those are the ones most people care about. Whoever wants more fonts knows to cherry pick from list.

When I look at the font list in OpenOffice in Ubuntu there are dozens of fonts that all look the same. They are obviously there for various non-latin alphabets but I have not installed those language packs so the fonts all appear as plain sans. It would be nice to get rid of the ones I don't use to shorten the list and make it easier to find the ones I want. It would also speed up the loading time of the word processor. I would also like to install a few replacement fonts so that they are available to all users, (ie. not just by putting them in my .fonts folder).

I found the 'font-manager' package useful to disable (without removing) these international fonts. This seems to solely disable the font for the current user, leaving them in the list for other accounts.

Go to your Home directory in File manager. Press Ctrl+H to show hidden files in Ubuntu. Right click to make a new folder and name it .fonts. That dot at the beginning is important. In Linux, if you put dot ahead of the file name, it hides the file from normal view.

Hmm.. it's just that a few months ago i had this really

dreadful experience with replacing this freetype2-ubuntu

with the extra/. All fonts got fucked and i couldn't fix it no matter what i did.

So as a last resort solution i had to restore the *whole* system piece by piece

from a quite vintage backup. I'd sworn to never touch this ffreetype2 ever again.

And now what. I can't even find the old PKGBUILD for it anywhere. Wtf.

Was curious how I may add more fonts to Libreoffice using Ubuntu 13.04? Do you have any suggestions which packages are compatible with Libreoffice in the Software Center? When I download/install the chosen font package(s) do I need to create a new folder titled .fonts or is it already created?

Godo question and I would echo the best answers as well. That should come automatic and if not you can copy download fonts. We used those to make unique and highlight some of our best sport and best casino sites which now look great to our online community.

This licence allows the licensed fonts to be used, studied, modified and redistributed freely. The fonts, including any derivative works, can be bundled, embedded, and redistributed provided the terms of this licence are met. The fonts and derivatives, however, cannot be released under any other licence. The requirement for fonts to remain under this licence does not require any document created using the fonts or their derivatives to be published under this licence, as long as the primary purpose of the document is not to be a vehicle for the distribution of the fonts.

If this doesn't work, try changing the font. There are plenty of choices at Google Fonts. You just need to add the desired fonts to your collection, click the download icon in the top right, and install the .ttf's on your system, which should be as easy as opening the files and clicking on install.

Ubuntu is an OpenType-based font family, designed to be a modern, humanist-style typeface[1] by London-based type foundry Dalton Maag, with funding by Canonical Ltd. The font was under development for nearly nine months, with only a limited initial release through a beta program, until September 2010. It was then that it became the new default font of the Ubuntu operating system in Ubuntu 10.10.[2][3] Its designers include Vincent Connare, creator of the Comic Sans and Trebuchet MS fonts.[4]

The font was first introduced in October 2010 with the release of Ubuntu 10.10 in four versions: Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic in English. With the release of Ubuntu 11.04 in April 2011, additional fonts and expanded language coverage were introduced.[6][7] The final development is intended to include a total of thirteen fonts consisting of:

The Ubuntu Font Licence allows the fonts to be "used, studied, modified and redistributed freely" given that the license terms are met. The license is copyleft and all derivative works must be distributed under the same license. Documents that use the fonts are not required to be licensed under the Ubuntu Font Licence.[20]

This article is a follow-up on an early 2012 article about using Incisive and Virtual System Platform on the Ubuntu operating system. Although the feedback has been positive, the one area that was not covered very well is the look of SimVision. When I wrote the original article I used Ubuntu 11.10, and the fonts in SimVision seemed to get worse when Ubuntu 12.04 arrived. This article will shed some light on how to make SimVision look better with Ubuntu 12.04. I'm not an expert on GUI programming and fonts, but I managed to come up enough information to improve the SimVision look.

Previously, I recommended installing the package ttf-mscorefonts-installer to get some extra fonts. With Ubuntu 12.04 this might be useful, but not enough to make SimVision look better. I found it very difficult to understand which fonts are available in Ubuntu. There are many packages that contain more fonts, but I really had no clue about which fonts are needed to make SimVision look better.

You may want to install more font packages. There many of them and it's not very clear what they contain. The other issue is that a reboot seems necessary to actually update the fonts. I tried various forms of fc-cache with no luck.

To increase the size of the font change the 12 to 16, save the file, and restart SimVision. You will see many of the fonts, including the menus are now much larger. You will also see the sub-menus are not bigger than before. The sub-menu font is controlled by another entry in file. 2351a5e196

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