On Sun, Oct 07, 2012 at 09:09:13AM +0100, Jamie Paul Griffin wrote: > [ Thomas Dickey wrote on Sat 6.Oct'12 at 7:32:00 -0400 ] > > > On Sat, Oct 06, 2012 at 07:31:07AM -0400, Thomas Dickey wrote: > > > On Sat, Oct 06, 2012 at 10:45:52AM +0100, Jamie Paul Griffin wrote: > > > > [ Ronald F. Guilmette wrote on Sat 6.Oct'12 at 2:25:04 -0700 ] > > > > > > > > > > > > > > When I view man pages in a xterm window, some parts of them are coming > > > > > out a bit garbled. > > > > > > > > > > I'm sure that there must be some recommended option or options for > > > > > xterm that will cause man pages to display properly. If someone would > > > > > tell me what those options are, I would appreciate it. Thanks. > > > > > > > > It will most likely be due to your locale settings. Also, I > > > > experimented with fonts in xterm and uxterm, only the default font > > > > allowed unicode charaters to display, so I am now using urxvt and it > > > > works great. I also changed my pager option in the shell start up file > > > > to less as opposed to more, and set lesscharset environment variable, > > > > man pages display fine now for me. > > > > > > For people using UTF-8, the uxterm script works out of the box... > > > > > > The usual problem with fonts is from overwriting the utf8Fonts resource > > > setting via a too-wide "fonts" wildcard pattern. > > > > For example > > > > http://invisible-island.net/xterm/xterm.faq.html#utf8_fonts > > Hi Thomas - is understand what your saying about uxterm - it does display > utf8 fonts correctly when leaving the font resource alone, but the default > font is very small, too small for my eyes. > > I installed a large number of utf8 supported X fonts, the ones I've tried > don't display Chinese or Korean, or Russian fonts etc. It became a little > frustrating which made me change to another terminal. The link you provided > doesn't appear to be active. Would you be kind enough to show the resource > settings you have used?
Well - the default size is a compromise (there are people who apparently use the smallest size regularly - looking at urxvt out-of-the-box, it's true there)(*). I generally use the font-size switching feature which I adapted from rxvt (one of the features which was omitted in urxvt), and switch to one of the two largest sizes using shift-keypad-plus. There are differences in the default fonts' coverage for CJK fonts, but between those two sizes I can see almost all characters. > I spent a long time reading through the man page and trying out different > resource settings and combinations of them, European fonts were never a > problem, just the east Asian characters and Russian characters as I > mentioned. I haven't noticed a problem (with uxterm) for Russian characters - more info might help. > I've set my locale to en_GB.UTF-8 using /etc/login.conf and then cap_mkdb > /etc/login.conf. As I said in my previous email, urxvt has no problem > displaying these characters but I'd like to get uxterm working properly none > the less, as I'm sure the OP does as well. (*) the default size when switching to TrueType fonts is roughly what I use normally for the bitmap fonts (much larger than the default), and I should have made it consistent. It's configurable, and I later added a note in the manpage explaining how to do this... The default font for xterm has "always" been the "fixed" font, which as noted above I find too small for normal use. -- Thomas E. Dickey http://invisible-island.net ftp://invisible-island.net
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