Hi Eric,
Am Fri, Apr 15, 2022 at 02:44:11PM -0400 schrieb Eric Brown:
> It looks like conversion to .woff from .ttf or .otf is straightforward
> with woff-tools, e.g. install fonts-roboto, then the appropriate file
> can be converted by, e.g. `sfnt2woff Roboto-Regular.ttf` which creates
> Roboto-R
Hi Eric,
thanks a lot for your investigation. This is extremely helpful.
Am Tue, Apr 05, 2022 at 08:50:08PM -0400 schrieb Eric Brown:
> Hi again,
>
> I tried to see what happens when the woff files are deleted from bslib.
>
> I cloned the bslib git, deleted the contents of the font folder, bui
Hi again,
I tried to see what happens when the woff files are deleted from bslib.
I cloned the bslib git, deleted the contents of the font folder, built
the R package locally, then tried to render an R markdown document
that uses a bslib theme (minty).
It fails with an error message (below).
pan
Hi Eric,
Am Mon, Apr 04, 2022 at 06:42:59AM -0400 schrieb Eric Brown:
> To update, I found that a few more are packaged in texlive-fonts-extra (
> https://packages.debian.org/buster/texlive-fonts-extra)
>
> Roboto https://packages.debian.org/bullseye/fonts-roboto
> Ubuntu https:
Hi Andreas,
I can at least identify which .woff files correspond to which fonts,
that is possible with grep. Here's the output:
https://gist.github.com/eebrown/95615fc35af364bd0fae09a69273dbdf
I think deleting the .woff files and seeing if the fonts render
properly when they are installed at the
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