+1
> The fonts look very nice imho. What about we include them
> all starting from next version of GeoServer? ;-)
> (and Vera/Liberation too)
>
> Cheers
> Andrea
>
>
>
--
Gabriel Roldan
OpenGeo - http://opengeo.org
Expert service straight from the developers.
---
On 05/26/2010 03:54 PM, Andrea Aime wrote:
> Andrea Aime ha scritto:
>
>> Hi,
>> one of the annoying things about Font usage in GeoServer
>> is that under Linux you never know what fonts the Java
>> runtime can see, and even when you do, well, they are
>> usually not many and not the same as on
Andrea Aime ha scritto:
> Hi,
> one of the annoying things about Font usage in GeoServer
> is that under Linux you never know what fonts the Java
> runtime can see, and even when you do, well, they are
> usually not many and not the same as on Windows (unless
> you manually installed the Microsoft
I always had to install fonts *into* my JRE in order to get them found.
Jody
On 25/05/2010, at 1:35 AM, Arne Kepp wrote:
> +1
>
> I think most distributions have meta-packages for the core fonts
> (there's not much of an EULA, but the fonts can only be distributed as
> the .exe or .RPM files
+1
I think most distributions have meta-packages for the core fonts
(there's not much of an EULA, but the fonts can only be distributed as
the .exe or .RPM files that Microsoft initially used). Bundling
cabextract and so forth is annoying.
But my impression is that Java generally doesn't fi
Ian Turton ha scritto:
> On Sun, May 23, 2010 at 4:00 PM, Andrea Aime wrote:
>> Hi,
>> one of the annoying things about Font usage in GeoServer
>> is that under Linux you never know what fonts the Java
>> runtime can see, and even when you do, well, they are
>> usually not many and not the same as
On Sun, May 23, 2010 at 4:00 PM, Andrea Aime wrote:
> Hi,
> one of the annoying things about Font usage in GeoServer
> is that under Linux you never know what fonts the Java
> runtime can see, and even when you do, well, they are
> usually not many and not the same as on Windows (unless
> you manu
Hi,
one of the annoying things about Font usage in GeoServer
is that under Linux you never know what fonts the Java
runtime can see, and even when you do, well, they are
usually not many and not the same as on Windows (unless
you manually installed the Microsoft Web fonts and
moved through click tr