I am working with a Chinese brand company and would like to remove some of their image links and replace them with fonts. I am having a hard time finding a authoritative source regarding the availability of Chinese fonts.

Does anyone know any fonts that are pushed on both OSx and Windows systems? I have seen quality English font comparisons, but would like to find something Chinese related. If I don't get any promising answers, I may have to make it myself...


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I can tell you that the most popular chinese font is simsun and that the vast majority of users are on windows and i mean an extremely high number. Even people who buy mac books will install windows on them. I think you should look through the wiki list and choose the one you think is best. FYI the reason they used the images is to solve the exact problem you are not facing

I am using a Mac and have installed the MacTeX-2014 distribution. I'd like to try to use the CJK package with regular pdflatex but there is no documentation for what Chinese fonts are included with this distribution (or TeX Live that MacTeX is based on).

The MacTex directory structure is a bit of a mystery to me. How can I discover what Chinese fonts are installed with this distribution, either by looking at the files, or perhaps there is documentation available that I have not found?

You don't alway use the font installed with TeX Live. You can use any font you have if you use XeTeX or LuaTeX. It is preferred to use xeCJK package for Chinese and you don't need to worry about what fonts are installed with TeX distribution.

For XeLaTeX (with xeCJK) or LuaLaTeX (with luatexja-fontspec), you can use any Chinese font installed in the Mac OS X system. Anyway, there are also four Fandol fonts for Simplified Chinese installed in TeX Live. See the fandol package in TeX Live.

I've installed two Chinese fonts from the repos: UMing and UKai. I like better how UKai looks, but the default font picked by Ubuntu (when selecting a non-Chinese font) is UMing. For example, my desktop font is Droid Sans, but the Chinese caracters are picked from UMing.How can I choose UKai for the default Chinese font?

Unfortunately, there isn't a GUI configuration editor for you to use to deal with this problem under Ubuntu. The GUI font selectors under Gnome or Unity only allows you to select one font per option, while the Font Manager allows you to enable/disable fonts only.

What it does is create a font resolution fallback list. When a program is requesting a sans-serif font (most GUI fonts are sans-serif by default), the system would try to use the first font (Droid Sans) for a character. If the font does not support that character, the second (UKai) will be used. I'm not sure if specifying Droid Sans as the first preference has any significance, but you might as well keep it, just to be safe.

There is also a more comprehensive configuration sample under /etc/fonts/conf.avail or /etc/fonts/conf.d (I don't remember exactly which) whose name contains zh-CN. Inside is a set of configuration used for adjusting the exact fallback font order, which is far more suitable than the above method. Just copy the content in the file into ~/.fonts.conf or ~/.config/font-manager/local.conf and change the ordering of fonts to suit your needs.

Yes, I reset the formatting with Ctrl + M, also changed the font from MS YaHei to Arial Unicode MS, then to MingLiu, then to MS Mincho. Still, I can see no problem except that the height of row 12 increased a bit.

I have opened your attached file but it showed nothing problem with Chinese characters, but Western characters were recognized as Asian characters, thus, they were displayed with Asian font instead of Western font.

Side note: In Yosemite, some of the Chinese fonts' Language properties have "Chinese, Chinese (Simplified)", so those will show up if you do a Smart Collection for "Chinese", but not "Chinese (Simplified)". In Sierra, however, none of the Chinese fonts' Language properties has "Chinese" alone.

I created a Smart Collection on High Sierra for filtering Chinese fonts.

It's an Any rule set consisting of three separate Languages include tests for: Chinese, Chinese (Simplified), and Chinese (Traditional).

When I selected a font from the list of fonts they appeared in English. Once the font was chosen the title of font (in the font properties box) appeared in Chinese characters. The text that I typed on the canvas displayed as I wanted. The application functioned in English, and all the help text appeared in English. This problem persisted in both Affinity Photo 2 and Affinity Designer 2 on my iPad. I deleted Affinity Designer from my iPad and saw the problem continue in Affinity Photo. I reinstalled Affinity Designer and the problem was resolved. The purchased Brushes and Assets were automatically there as well as the custom Assets that I had created. The issue of the Chinese font name persisted in Affinity Photo. I deleted Affinity Photo and then reinstalled. Problem has been resolved.

Seems to be related to all fonts installed in affinity designer 1 - choosing one of these switches all the font descriptors to Chinese apple or otherwise, I uninstalled all the fonts in designer 1 (note designer 2 shows no fonts installed ) and reinstalled them via designer 2 seem to have cured the problem. The red font is because designer cant find the font possibly deleting the original designer 1 might remove its installed fonts as well?

I have some Creative Cloud fonts and other open source fonts using iFont on my iPad. It looks very random and all types of fonts, including system, Creative Cloud, and iFont-installed fonts, show in Chinese characters.

I'm using DWM as my window manager and my favorite font is Source Code Pro. So I set it as my DWM's font.However, I always have some Chinese characters to display. But the Chinese character is so ugly on my UI. So is there a way to change only the Chinese fonts? By the way, I want to keep my system language English.

OK then: before you do anything else, please take a look at your /etc/fonts/conf.avail and /etc/fonts/conf.d. This is where the font engine is actually tuned. The file 65-nonlatin.conf is the one when you can set priority of your non-latin fonts for a certain language. (The similarly named 40-nonlatin.conf lets you specify whether a font belongs to a serif or sans family, among others.) First, backup the original files, and then place on top of the list the font you'd want to use as a preferred one for Chinese. See if you can find a combination you like. (Of course, make sure you have hinting and subpixel rendering enabled, too.)

In case nothing works for you, you can always grab the files from the repo in my signature (patched freetype2 + customized fontconfig settings). You will find a little preview there (Firefox + Wikipedia homepage) to see if this is the way for you to go.

I am facing trouble in displaying chinese fonts in my template. All I get is boxes. While righht clicking and selecting properties, I am able to see the chinese font, but i want the same in template view. Kindly help me ASAP.

But I found that BiauKai and DFKai-SB are not the best Chinese fonts in mac and windows, both of them have problems. Few characters in BiauKai are not correctly shown, and the top of some DFKai-SB characters are trimmed. I finally use STKaiti, this style can be presented both in Mac and win.

But when I want to choose them in illustrator to try and see how they look in my document with a specific text, they show up with their chinese name, and I can't identify them. They do show a small sample on the right but it's not enough to really see how they'll look in the document:

Unfortunately, you cannot just change the font and have it appear in Chinese. You would need to retype it, or paste it, or Place it, from a document with Chinese text. If you want to type in Chinese, you need to turn on the Chinese input method in the Keyboard System Preferences, as described here:

Hello! I think all of you do know that the team name will be bolded it there are new messages in a team. However, the Chinese font is too confusing that I can't even differentiate whether it is bolded or not. Please make some improvements so that I can differentiate whether the text is bolded or not. Thank you so much.

Although I think display of characters depends on whether or not the font in question has glyphs for those Unicode code points. If it still occurs, you may try changing your browser's default font to a font that doesn't have them.

Now, Emacs has modernized dramatically since, and X is using fontconfig to define fonts, and Chinese encoding has changed from gb2312 to UTF8 as default as well. So, I'm wondering what's the modern fontsets setting for Emacs is to work with Chinese properly?

Recently I wanted a encrypted tool with my cloud storage tool Nutstore in China, after some investigations, I decided to try Cryptomator, I downloaded the exe installer and installed it step by step, finally I start the application, the presented window depressed me, picture as below:

screen13221092 81.4 KB

as you see, all chinese font is shown rectangle, then I want change the UI language to English, but even the setting panel is full of rectangles, I can not identify which option can change language , then I click every inputbox to find which can display a choices list of different language, but none. be457b7860

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