On Wed, 2014-01-22 at 17:29 +0100, Marc Lehmann wrote: > On Tue, Jan 21, 2014 at 02:39:26PM +0200, clutton <[email protected]> wrote: > > As a new rxvt user, I may think that enormous width means something > > wrong with rxvt rendering. > > And something is wrong: the font chosen - the fonts that are chosen by > urxvt by default do not show thisa problem (or that is a bug in the > default font selection). > > > Because other software displays that font correctly. > > For some unstated definition of "correctly" that probably only includes > latin glyphs. > > > Furthermore, all software displays that font correctly. > > (That really makes no sense). > > > So, what is the official answer? Don't use bad fonts? > > Dont ever use bad fonts, obviously, but the problem here is not a bad > font, but simply an unsuitable one. Proportional fonts are not suitable > for terminals, which require a fixed width font. Unfortunately, xft only > supports proportional fonts, so urxvt has to compromise. > > (See my reply to your private mail for more details). > > > «The solution is to upgrade your system or switch to a better one» > > doesn't look like a right answer for my question. > > What is your question? "How can I make a proprtional font look good in a > terminal?" - I don't think anybody has an answer to that. >
every terminal emulator I'd used shows proportional fonts in appropriate manner, except urxvt. The question rather is «why FAQ doesn't have explanation, to what I'm observing». Arch Linux already has patched version in aur. https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Rxvt-unicode#Installation And we were thinking to include this patch into urxvt FreeBSD port as an optional feature http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=185656 But, ok. Speak is cheap, show me the code :). I'll try to do some codding help.
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