Zhenxin Li wrote: > Thanks! I've installed it successfully! > > Another problem. My locale is zh-CN.GB2312, and I've installed zh-CN support > for openoffice.
Meaning the openoffice-l10n-zh-cn and openoffice-help-zh-cn packages? > But, the UI(menu) font doesn't display correctly. There seems to be a tool > called font replacement tool, but I can't find it. /usr/share/doc/openoffice.org/README.Debian.gz has some information about changing the user-interface font: > If you use KDE or Gnome, OOo will use the same font face and size as > your desktop environment. If you use another window manager, you can > either let OOo pick a default font itself, or change the font to be > used (see next section), or edit /etc/openoffice/openoffice.org and > set OOO_FORCE_DESKTOP to KDE or Gnome, to use KDE or Gnome settings > respectively. > > Changing the default user interface font typeface for non-KDE/Gnome > desktops [...] > - Font typeface - > > You can change the default font typeface by replacing it with a > different font installed on your system. This can be done using the > font replacement function. Choose Tools - Options - OpenOffice.org - > Font Replacement to access this function. > > To change the font of the OpenOffice.org user interface, you have to > replace the default font "Andale Sans UI" with another font and mark > the "always" setting for this replacement. "Andale Sans UI" is not > selectable and has to be typed in. The replacement font has to be a > font which supports the requested locale ( e.g for Korean language > the replacement font has to be a font including Korean characters). > > Refer to the OpenOffice.org Help for a detailed explanation of the > font replacement dialog. - Josh Triplett

