On Tue, 12 Jun 2012 01:10:59 +0100, Brian wrote: > On Mon 11 Jun 2012 at 20:59:23 +0000, Camaleón wrote: > >> On Mon, 11 Jun 2012 19:14:09 +0100, Brian wrote: >> >>> As I have described I have no problem seeing the pdf as its maker >>> intended. > >> Neither I have it in wheezy but in lenny the two sample PDF files >> render with the wrong character. In both systems I have "symbol.ttf" >> installed under the same path ("/usr/local/share/fonts/*.ttf"). > > The only symbol.ttf I can find in Wheezy at > > http://www.debian.org/distrib/packages > > is in the libwine package. Is that the correct file? I hope so, because > I went to a lot of trouble to download and install it. :)
I hope you did not install "libwine" just to test this (you can download the .deb file and grabb only the required file). I'm using the original Windows TrueType fonts (what I always do is copy/ paste the fonts from my Windows machine to my Linux systems) but well, for our purpose we can expect that both "symbol.ttf" files (libwine and windows) are the same :-) > Bad news: libwine has symbol.ttf in /usr/share/wine/fonts and the OP's > pdf displays mu, as it should. > > Good news (maybe): moving symbol.ttf to /usr/share/fonts reproduces the > OP's problem - mu is displayed as a proportionality symbol. For this I can't tell, the OP will have to confirm. > I may as well throw in something I came across earlier today: > > https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=700729 I experience the same problem with the mentioned PDF in the above bug (using lenny and the windows symbol.ttf font by default). > But this is a different distribution and, in any case, the location of > the Debian wine fonts doesn't affect the pdf. The OP needs to move files > out of the fonts directory to isolate the cause. Yes, I would start from there: moving "symbol.ttf" (if present) or listing all the symbol fonts he has in the system and placing them in a different place other than the usual, one by one and testing each time. > Either that or, as a way of working round it, use mupdf, which has the > fonts compliled into the binary. Then "mu" does the same as Acrobat Raeder: it uses its own fonts. Greetings, -- Camaleón -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/jr7u2a$u1l$8...@dough.gmane.org