"Person, Rod" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote Subject: Using Win NT fonts in LINUX...... Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> Can any tell me how to use NT fonts in Linux. I have a disk of fonts I >> like that were free fonts for NT or 95, and being about the only thing >> that I liked in NT or 95 I want to use them. If not is there so quick >> tutorial on porting fonts..... We, X-TrueType Server Project, officially release the X-TrueType Server Version 1.0 For details, please refer to the following pages by Takuya SHIOZAKI: (in Japanese) http://hawk.ise.chuo-u.ac.jp/student/person/tshiozak/x-tt/index.html (in English) http://hawk.ise.chuo-u.ac.jp/student/person/tshiozak/x-tt/index-eng.html X-TrueType Server Mailing List in English If you want to particiate in this mailing list, please send the control mail which has the mail body as follow: subscribe x-tt-english to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Then, you'll receive the verification mail from Majordomo service agent. So, please comply with this mail. And, I am also a member of Debian-JP project. I have already debianized X servers and xfs packages with X-TT patch for slink: xfree86_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1.diff.gz xfree86_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1.dsc xfree86_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1_i386.changes xfs-tt_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1_i386.deb xnest_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1_i386.deb xprt_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1_i386.deb xserver-8514_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1_i386.deb xserver-agx_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1_i386.deb xserver-i128_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1_i386.deb xserver-mach32_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1_i386.deb xserver-mach64_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1_i386.deb xserver-mach8_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1_i386.deb xserver-mono_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1_i386.deb xserver-p9000_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1_i386.deb xserver-s3_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1_i386.deb xserver-s3v_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1_i386.deb xserver-svga_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1_i386.deb xserver-vga16_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1_i386.deb xserver-w32_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1_i386.deb xvfb_3.3.2.3a-1.xtt.1_i386.deb These can get from following URLs: ftp://ftp.debian.or.jp/pub/Linux/debian-jp/project-jp/experimental I'd like to marge X-TT patch to xfree86 package of slink. Please test them :-) ********** X-TT ver v1.0 release note ********** This is an announcement for X-TrueType Server Version 1.0 [Aoi MATSUBARA Release 0], which is released now!! Since February 1998, we X-TrueType Server Project has been providing the X-TrueType Server (X-TT in short) Ver0.x [Series "MULTI"] as a beta release. We have just finished implementation of necessary facilities, and current X-TT is stable enough for practical use. Now we settled that we shift the development phase of X-TT into Ver1.x [Series "Aoi MATSUBARA"] as official release. We officially release the X-TrueType Server Version 1.0 [Aoi MATSUBARA Release 0], on August 30th, 1998 (GMT). For details, please refer to the following pages by Takuya SHIOZAKI: (in Japanese) http://hawk.ise.chuo-u.ac.jp/student/person/tshiozak/x-tt/index.html (in English) http://hawk.ise.chuo-u.ac.jp/student/person/tshiozak/x-tt/index-eng.html These pages are the primary sources of the current X-TT distribution. Takuya SHIOZAKI is the supervisor of the current X-TT. ===What is X-TrueType Server?=== X-TrueType Server is an X server and/or an X font server that can handle TrueType fonts directly. With X-TT, you can use TrueType fonts on the X Window environments without modifying existing applications, and in the same feel as using BDF fonts or PCF fonts. Thanks to widely spreading Windows, we can get a large variety of TrueType fonts at no or relatively low cost. X-TT supports various font transformations, such as slanting or magnifying. This makes X-TT very useful for X users especially in far-east Asia, including Japan. These users have been suffering a bitter experience that only a few fonts were available. X-TT requires FreeType, which is a free TrueType font rendering library. There are another similar project named "xfsft" by Mr. Mark Leisher and Juliusz Chroboczek. X-TT and xfsft are developed independently of each other for historical reasons. The advantages of X-TT over xfsft are as follows: - Support for wider character sets: * For Western languages ASCII Any ISO8859 (part 1-10, and 15) Any KOI8 * For Chinese Big5ETen GB2312 * For Korean KSC5601-0 KSC5601-1 (EUC encoding) KSC5601Wansung KSC5601Johab * For Japanese JISX0201 (ANK) JISX0208 (JIS Level 1 and Level 2 Kanji) JISX0212 (JIS Auxiliary Kanji) * For Unified Character Set Unicode (X clients can use it) - Charset conversion codes are dynamic loadable modules. This enables users to use required encodings on demand, and there are no worry that the needless encodings waste the memory. Additionally, you can add new code converters easily. - With the TTCap description, which is an extension for fonts.dir, you can use the following features: * slanting for non-slanted fonts, * pseudo-bolding for non-bold fonts, * adjusting font metrics, * and selecting the face in TrueType Collection files. - X-TT provides both the strict-method and the lazy-method to calculate font metrics. The strict-method is essential to use proportional fonts, but we found that such method is far inefficient than useful, especially for the fonts containing large number of glyphs. This is caused by a structural defect in the X Window System itself. Xfsft seems to provide only the strict-method to calculate font metrics. - Server library "libfont" can be built as a shared library. Thus, you will be able to update X-TT to future versions, without recompiling your X server, X font server, and applications. - The know-hows to handle 16bit encoded fonts have been developed in the X-TT Project. These are available only with X-TT :-). We are preparing binary packages (or ports) for the following platforms: * FreeBSD * NetBSD for x86 * OpenBSD for x86 * Slackware Linux * RedHat Linux * Debian GNU/Linux ----- Wed Sep 9 02:26:51 JST 1998 ISHIKAWA Mutsumi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> a member of X-TT project a member of Japan Linux Users Group <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> a member of Debian-JP project <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>