On Tue, Apr 16, 2002 at 09:02:34PM +0200, DSC Siltec wrote: > I have the opposite problem , but I can help you with yours > even as I ask about mine. > > You are using the ISO-8859-2 character set, or else the Eastern-European > character set. That includes such things as Polish (Z-caret, S-caret, > C-caret, also an L-crossbar that sounds like "w".) > > Use the TT-font server to select a different font. Or select a > different font in your applications. In netscape, for example, edit > preferences, and then your first option->second choice is "fonts".
This wasn't my problem, it was that of Matijs van Zuijlen. I hope you don't mind me cc'ing your message back to the list so that he can see it. I'm really curious as to how he ended up with ISO-8859-2 output, though, as the version of groff in Debian doesn't support it and Matijs said he was using an ISO-10646-1 font. > My own problem: > > I really want the ISO8859-13 set, which contains the Baltic font: > Z-caret (Zhe), C-caret (che), S-caret (esh), but also a-cedilla, > e-cedilla, e-dot, i-cedilla, u-bar (long u), u-cedilla. > > But Linux doesn't support that, for some reason, even when the fonts > include it. [I imported my Windoze fonts, which also have this same > Baltic representation, but cannot display them with Linux]. > > Does anyone know if there is an *unstable* version of a TT font server > that will provide ISO8859-13? > > Or why doesn't Linux support the Baltic fonts? I can't help you here - maybe somebody else on the list can. Cheers, -- Colin Watson [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]