Rui-Xiang Guo in PR pkg/17829. cyberbase-ttf differs from cyberbit-ttf in
that it does not include the CJK subset.
Bitstream Cyberbit is a TrueType font. It is an international font,
containing characters from many languages. Each character is encoded with its
Unicode value, according to Unicode 2.0 standards.
Cyberbit was developed by Bitstream to provide Unicode Consortium members with
a test font. It is therefore distributed freely to customers that need advanced
multilingual fonts for testing and other non-commercial uses. Customers that
wish to use Cyberbit for other purposes must license the font from Bitstream.
Rui-Xiang Guo in PR pkg/17829.
Bitstream Cyberbit is a TrueType font. It is an international font,
containing characters from many languages. Each character is encoded with its
Unicode value, according to Unicode 2.0 standards.
Cyberbit was developed by Bitstream to provide Unicode Consortium members with
a test font. It is therefore distributed freely to customers that need advanced
multilingual fonts for testing and other non-commercial uses. Customers that
wish to use Cyberbit for other purposes must license the font from Bitstream.
This package installs two free TrueType fonts, they are useful for web viewing.
The typeface is Geometric Slabserif 703, which is Bitstream's version of
Memphis a typeface designed in 1930 by Rudolph Weiss. While it may seem odd
that a typeface designed 65 years ago would look good on-screen today,
the reason has to do with the shape of the letterforms themselves.
They have a simple, geometric shape, and their serifs (the small protrusions
from the ends of the letter) are in the "slab" family, which means they, too,
are simple. The "x-height" (the height of the lowercase letter "x") is
relatively large, but not so large that it makes reading difficult in the web
where there is little real control over leading (the space between the lines).
Bitstream is supplying these typefaces to help you see the importance of type
on the web. Once you see how different web pages can look just by changing the
typeface, and how much easier they can be to read, you'll see the importance of
typographic choice on the web.
Based on PR 13913 by Kevin Lo, with some cleanup by me.
Kcfonts is a suit of chinese Ming Fanti fonts for X-window.
Kcfonts' fonts are contributed by Kau Chauo Information CO. to all
TANet users running on PC. Thanks Chin-Hao Tsai <c-tsai@uiuc.edu>, who
converted it to the style of ETen's fonts. Now you can use kcfonts &
crxvt to view Chinese by BIG5 encoding.
- Implements ``fuzz'' value for large encodings (defaults to 1%);
precise heuristics are still used for 8-bit fonts.
- Implements simple heuristic for distinguishing charcell fonts;
tested with Courier New (-m-) and Lucida Console (-c-), more testing
is needed.
- Empty names are now treated the same as missing, which may (or may
not) work around some arguably incorrect fonts.
- Changed big5.eten-0 to big5-0.
- Implements ``fuzz'' value for large encodings (defaults to 1%);
precise heuristics are still used for 8-bit fonts.
- Implements simple heuristic for distinguishing charcell fonts;
tested with Courier New (-m-) and Lucida Console (-c-), more testing
is needed.
- Empty names are now treated the same as missing, which may (or may
not) work around some arguably incorrect fonts.
- Changed big5.eten-0 to big5-0.
p5-Font-TTF is a Perl module for TrueType font hacking. Supports reading,
processing and writing of the following tables: GDEF, GPOS, GSUB, LTSH,
OS/2, PCLT, bsln, cmap, cvt, fdsc, feat, fpgm, glyf, hdmx, head, hhea,
hmtx, kern, loca, maxp, mort, name, post, prep, prop, vhea, vmtx and the
reading and writing of all other table types.
This is a collection of TrueType fonts which be created for fun. You can
use them for free to do anything you want, you just can't take the fonts
and resell them (on a CD, for instance). Read the readme.txt if you're not
sure what this means.
Fixes pkg/16960 by rxg@netbsd.org
This is a complete set of three font faces (Times, Helvetica, Courier)
in seven sizes and four variants each, optimized for use by the Netscape
(Mozilla) WWW browser under Unix.
Japanese proportional bitmap fonts developed _only_ to display "Mona".
(a jargon meaning Japanese face marks or kind of ASCII art (definitely
no ASCII!) used in 2ch.net, one of the biggest BBS comunities in Japan.)
This packages includes TrueType fonts from Microsoft with WGL4 (Windows
Glyph List 4) charset:
- Andale Mono
- Webdings
- Trebuchet MS, with variants Bold, Italic, and Bold Italic
- Georgia, with variants Bold, Italic and Bold Italic
- Verdana, with variants Bold, Italic and Bold Italic
- Comic Sans, Comic Sans Bold
- Arial Black
- Impact
- Arial, with variants Bold, Italic and Bold Italic
- Times New Roman, with variants Bold, Italic and Bold Italic
- Courrier New, with variants Bold, Italic and Bold Italic
only emit a message and don't actually fetch anything. This allows
us to make the output of "fetch-list" for these packages consistent
with other packages.
While we're in here, integrate DYNAMIC_MASTER_SITES with the
${ORDERED_SITES} macro. The only functional change here is that
${MASTER_SITE_OVERRIDE} is now respected. Still to do -- something
appropriate for "fetch-list" for these packages, like sourcing
"getsites.sh" into the generated script. (Well, "package", but there
are two others that do something similar in their "Makefile".)
Also eliminate the misbegotten _FETCH_ALLFILES macro -- now that only
"fetch" uses it, move it's functionality directly under "do-fetch".
foo-* to foo-[0-9]*. This is to cause the dependencies to match only the
packages whose base package name is "foo", and not those named "foo-bar".
A concrete example is p5-Net-* matching p5-Net-DNS as well as p5-Net. Also
change dependency examples in Packages.txt to reflect this.
The package includes 88 basic fonts of the Computer Modern font family
that were designed by D.E.Knuth. as well as the most usefull AMS fonts:
Euler family and symbols. Totally, 52 fonts are included into BaKoMa/AMS.
The fonts are in a ATM compatible PostScript Type 1 font format (PFB+AFM+PFM)
as well as in a TrueType font format (TTF).
This font set can be used for typesetting most of (La)TeX documents:
- printing documents on a PostScript printer
by using, for example, Rokiki's DVIPS;
- printing documents on a wide set of matrix printers
by using DVIPS and GhostScript.
- drawing slides on vector plotters by using PostScript 'plot.ps' program
which is supplied with the collection.
For drawing documents on HPGL plotters, the 'ps2hpgl' utility can be used.
It is available in 'ftp.mathworks.com' host
in the '/pub/contrib/tools' directory.
- displaing documents under MS Windows by using TrueType version of
those fonts or by using PostScript version with ATM.
For this case, fonts have specific encoding. Please read the
section about font encoding before using these fonts with MS Windows.
- install rlR5x8.pcf.gz if only USE_NON_RECTANGULAR == YES.
- include "../../bsd.prefs.mk" to pull /etc/mk.conf in.
- mkfontdir is a part of standard X distribution, so it is in /usr/X11R6/bin
whether xpkgwedge is installed or not. Simply invoke it as mkfontdir.
s/RECTANGULAR/SQUARE/.
first component is now a package name+version/pattern, no more
executable/patchname/whatnot.
While there, introduce BUILD_USES_MSGFMT as shorthand to pull in
devel/gettext unless /usr/bin/msgfmt exists (i.e. on post-1.5 -current).
Patch by Alistair Crooks <agc@netbsd.org>
${USE_KANAME}!=YES then NO_PATCH=YES
to reduce these error messages:
>>> ===> /pub/NetBSD/packages/pkgsrc/fonts/jisx0208fonts:
>>> FATAL: patchfile 'patch-aa' is in files/patch-sum
>>> but not in ././NO-EXIST/patch-aa. Rerun 'make makepatchsum'.
Convert most MESSAGE files to new syntax (${VARIABLE} gets replaced,
not @VARIABLE@, nor @@VARIABLE@@).
By default, substitutions are done for LOCALBASE, PKGNAME, PREFIX,
X11BASE, X11PREFIX; additional patterns can be added via MESSAGE_SUBST.
Clean up some packages while I'm there; add RCS tags to most MESSAGEs.
Remove some uninteresting MESSAGEs.
key changes from 1.1 to 1.2:
- autoconf-based installation Makefile is supplieed
- Bold, Italic, Bold-Italic styles are added.
- BDF file name changed for DOS.
These are character-cell fonts for use with the X Window System,
created by Jim Knoble. The current list of fonts included in this
package are:
Neep (formerly known as NouveauGothic)
A pleasantly legible variation on the standard fixed fonts that
accompany most distributions of the X Window System. Comes in both
normal and bold weights in small, medium, large, extra-large, and
huge sizes, as well as an extra-small size that only comes in
normal weight. Comes in the following encodings:
ISO-8859-1 (Latin1, Western European + Icelandic)
ISO-8859-2 (Latin2, Eastern European)
ISO-8859-9 (Latin5, Western European + Turkish)
ISO-8859-15 (Latin9, Western European + Euro Symbol)
Modd
A fixed-width font with sleek, contemporary styling. Normal and
bold weights in a 10-point (6x11) and a 12-point (6x13) size.
ISO-8859-1 encoding only.