>--[Arne Goetje]--<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > AFAIK KDE3 will try to interpolate the fonts to display glyphs which are > not actually encoded in the font. BUt I don't know how this works and if > the international xfont packages have something to do with it.
Not "will try", but "does try". It still has some issues, in particular the fact that if you have some broken font installed it is now even harder to figure out which font is the culprit (and Debian has lots of those, like some displaying o for an ö etc, or not having a glyph that they claim to have, resulting in black boxes). Currently I use Neep Alt/11, but /10 and /12 will give me the same font, except that different fonts will be used for substitution. Also, I can't save in the configuration which of those will be used; the konsole window from the saved session will be like /12, while all other konsole windows will behave like /11, which is really wierd. But I have not given up that maybe one day Debian will stop shipping broken fonts, and font substitution will just work. And having a way to select the font to be substitued like Mozilla has. Btw, the international xfonts you're talking about are nothing else then fonts that contain glyphs for the indicated encoding. -- 100 DM = 51 ¤ 13 ˘. 100 ¤ = 195 DM 58 pf. mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.ruediger-kuhlmann.de/ -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]