Nimbus Mono is a monospaced typeface created by URW Studio in 1984,[1] and eventually released under the GPL and AFPL (as Type 1 font for Ghostscript) in 1996[2][3][4][5] and LPPL in 2009.[6][7][8] In 2017, the font, alongside other Core 35 fonts, has been additionally licensed under the terms of OFL.[9] It features Normal, Bold, Italic, and Bold Italic weights, and is one of several freely licensed fonts offered by URW++. Although not exactly the same, Nimbus Mono has metrics and glyphs that are very similar to Courier and Courier New.

Unfortunately, something is broken there: right now KDE Font Installer doesn't see any Nimbus; on the other hand, Fontmatrix reports (on uncheking the Nimbus family) "Deactivation Error: Unable to unlink: /usr/share/fonts/Type1/n022003l.pfb..."


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Whatever font I choose on Firefox, it keeps using Nimbus Sans only for some websites like Facebook, Twitter, etc. This what it looks like on a post from Facebook. I already selected Liberation font but it keeps using Nimbus font. This is my font preferences and inspecting an element on the page shows Nimbus font is selected. I tried Firefox on Windows and it uses the one I chose on font preferences. So problem is within Arch Linux. Not sure how to fix it.

I'm not convinced that a subscription to Acrobat DC includes access to fonts, as that is not normally needed. You can check that, however, by going to fonts.adobe.com ( -sans), sign in if you aren't, and search for the font you need. If you can install, install.

We'll supply a kit containing webfonts that can be used within digital ads, such as banner ads. This kit may be shared with third parties who are working on your behalf to produce the ad creatives, however you are wholly responsible for it.

Webfonts can be used on a single domain. Agencies responsible for multiple websites, for example web design agencies or hosting providers, may not share a single webfont license across multiple websites.

Every time the webpage using the webfont kit is loaded (i.e, the webfont kit CSS which holds the @font-face rule is called) the counting system counts a single pageview for each webfont within the webfont kit.

An Electronic Doc license is based on the number of publications in which the font is used. Each issue counts as a separate publication. Regional or format variations don't count as separate publications.

Note that I know a way to resolve this issue. If I define an alias for 'Liberation Mono' explicitly in ~/.config/fontconfig/fonts.conf then I get the desired results, i.e. text in 'Liberation Mono' font and text in 'Courier' font appear similar.

But my question remains. Why is it that without this explicit alias in fonts.conf, when I specify 'Liberation Mono' font in the CSS, the browser does not use 'Nimbus Mono L' and instead uses 'DejaVu Serif' font, even though the fc-match "Liberation Mono" outputs the same thing regardless of whether I have defined an alias in fonts.conf or not?

Cursor has been greatly extended. The font is available both in Adobe Type 1 and in OpenType formats, and LaTeX support (for use with a variety of encodings) is provided. Vietnamese characters were added by Han The Thanh.

In my case I wanted Firefox to render text with a CSS font-family set to prefer Arial using Noto Sans. Fontconfig is configured by default to use Liberation Sans as metrical drop-in for Arial (/etc/fonts/conf.avail/30-metric-aliases.conf), which at first seemed impossible to override without altering fontconfig's main config files.

After long search, trial and error the solution was dead simple: Overrides are respected when in the mentioned user directories and named according to fontconfig's expectations in the form [0-9][0-9]*.conf (see /etc/fonts/conf.avail/50-user.conf and /etc/fonts/conf.d/README).

Indeed, Pascal, when you say, in your last post, that you decided to use the Lucida Sans Unicode, unfortunately, this font is NOT a monospaced font. To observe this fact, just write, in a new tab, the example text below :

In Notepad++, if you use the Courrier New default font, which is a monospaced ( or fixed ) font, the four lines above, take exactly the same horizontal length, but they DON'T, if you're using, for example, the "Lucida Sans Unicode font or any proportional font, like Times New Roman, Arial, Tahoma, ... ) !

Depending upon the chosen proportional font, in N++, the length of these four lines may be quite different. That's why, generally, for code editors, as N++, it's better to use a monospaced font !

With fixed fonts, as any character uses the same horizontal amount of space, readability of the source code is improved and tabulated data is aligned, throughout the current document.

So, I tried to collect the different fixed fonts, on the Net ! And, after some days, here is, below, an alphabetic and numbered list of 45 fixed fonts, with their characteristics and the links to download them. May be, one of them will be the right one, to you, for coding :-)

Select the FOUR fonts LTYPE.TTF, LTYPEB.TTF, LTYPEBO.TTF and LTYPEO.TTF ( Font 24 ) or the True Type Collection fonts Batang.ttc , Gulim.ttc , MingLIU.ttc , MSGothic.ttc , MSMincho.ttc and SimSun.ttc ( v5.00 for Vista, W7 and W8 )

In the font Inconsolata-dz ( 20 ), the delimiters (') and (") are NOT curved. Further explanations on -straight-single-and-double-quotes-inconsola/

It's quite obvious that this list isn't exhaustive, at all ! If you find out other monospaced fonts, or an improved version of some fonts, with, for example, the Euro sign, please, let me know ! Many thanks, by advance.

To sump up, Pascal, as you, both, need a monospaced font and an Unicode font, I suggest that you choose between the 2 fonts DejaVu Sans Mono ( 08 ) or Meslo LG ( 25 ).

From Wikipedia: Nimbus Mono is a monospaced typeface created by URW Studio in 1984, and eventually released under the GPL and AFPL (as Type 1 font for Ghostscript) in 1996 and LPPL in 2009. It features Normal, Bold, Italic, and Bold Italic weights, and is one of several freely licensed fonts offered by URW++. Although the characters are not exactly the same, Nimbus Mono has metrics that are very similar to Courier and Courier New.

As far as I understand, shouldn't /usr/share/fonts/type1/urw-base35/NimbusRoman-Bold.t1: Nimbus Roman:style=Bold be the desired font? But the log file says I don't have a bold font for the specified Font family:

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This fonts are authors' property, and are either shareware, demo versions or public domain. The licence mentioned above the download button is just an indication. Please look at the readme-files in the archives or check the indicated author's website for details, and contact him if in doubt. If no author/licence is indicated that's because we don't have information, that doesn't mean it's free.

I would like to change the font size in the DW editor. Despite combing through the server code (both grep and vgrep), I have not found anything concerning the editor's font anywhere. Can someone point me in the right direction?

Meta setting that changes the label-like sizes axes.labelsize, legend.fontsize, tick.labelsize, and grid.labelsize. Default is 'medium' (equivalent to rc['font.size']). Must be a relative font size or unit string interpreted by units. Numeric units are points.

Meta setting that changes the title-like sizes abc.size, title.size, suptitle.size, leftlabel.size, rightlabel.size, etc. Default is 'med-large' (i.e. 1.1 times rc['font.size']). Must be a relative font size or unit string interpreted by units. Numeric units are points.

Currently styled via en:MediaWiki:Common.css with div.mw-geshi div, div.mw-geshi div pre, span.mw-geshi, pre.source-css, pre.source-javascript, pre.source-lua {font-family: monospace, Courier !important;} and with a codecomment that points to Wikipedia:Typography#The monospace 'bug'.

Version 11 (and earlier, at least since version 9) has a similar inspector tool, but it seems to only show the stack, not which of the fonts is really used. Version 8 has the Developer Tools feature, but it seems it didn't include inherited styles, so it's useless for the task.

To access the Web Inspector feature, open the Advanced tab in the Preferences dialog and tick "Show Develop menu in menu bar". It will actually be included as a sub-menu of the page drop-down menu, but it will also add a quicker "Inspect Element" to the context menu within the page itself. This however seems to have a similar drawback to Internet Explorer, in that it will only show the requested style, and not the particular font that is actually being used to render the content. e24fc04721

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