As I already wrote, it turned out to be a bad USB cable. I should have
checked that first. My bad.
On Thu, 22 Jun 2017 15:20:40 +0300
borissh1...@gmail.com wrote:
> Hi ,
>
> I had a similar issue when I checked the wrong board in the IDE (few
> years ago things may have changed).
>
> Unplug
Hi ,
I had a similar issue when I checked the wrong board in the IDE (few years ago
things may have changed).
Unplug the device , close the IDE , plug it in again and :
dmesg
ls /dev/serial/by-*
start the IDE again and make sure you choose the correct board.
On Tuesday, 20 June 2017
On 2017-06-22 11:53, Nadav Har'El wrote:
> What does it take to "convert" a Type 1 font into OpenType or TrueType?
> Is it just a trivial format conversion issue, or something more
> involved? Is something lost in this conversion - precision, ability to
> edit, or anything else?
I just did a
It should be quite trivial to do the conversion with the open source
package FontForge. Note that converting Type1 fonts to otf is a lossless
conversion, as OpenType is a superset of Type1 and TrueType. Type1 and
TrueType store the font paths differently as Type1 uses Bézier curves,
wheras
2017-06-22 11:53 GMT+03:00 Nadav Har'El :
> On Fri, Jun 02, 2017, E.S. Rosenberg wrote about "Re: [LibreOffice 5.3/Ubuntu
> 17.04] Culmus Fonts not detected":
>> For those of you who are interested:
>> As of 5.3 LO no longer supports Type1 fonts which is how the
>>
On Fri, Jun 02, 2017, E.S. Rosenberg wrote about "Re: [LibreOffice 5.3/Ubuntu
17.04] Culmus Fonts not detected":
> For those of you who are interested:
> As of 5.3 LO no longer supports Type1 fonts which is how the
> culmus-fancy font set ships.
> The best solution is to convert them to OpenType