Re: Font used for raku welcome message

2021-08-28 Thread Norman Gaywood
Hi William, Yes, the Fedora/Centos packages look like the come from: https://savannah.gnu.org/projects/freefont/ $ dnf info gnu-free-serif-fonts ... Name : gnu-free-serif-fonts Version : 20120503 ... >From repo: appstream Summary : GNU FreeFont Serif Font URL :

Re: Font used for raku welcome message

2021-08-28 Thread William Michels via perl6-users
Hello Norman! Just to clarify, these were the fonts that you had success with? https://savannah.gnu.org/projects/freefont/ FWIW, the (.otf) FreeMono -- Regular font works fine on my MacOS system (Terminal.app), with the words 퐑퐚퐤퐮퐝퐨™ and 퐑퐚퐤퐮™ appropriately showing up in Bold. Best, Bill. On

Re: Font used for raku welcome message

2021-08-27 Thread Norman Gaywood
Thanks for the suggestions Andinus and James Cloos In the end I was able to solve the issue by doing: lsof -p and examining the open font files. There were not that many of them (only 9). Then this, on one of the open font files (my 3rd file attempt): dnf whatprovides

Re: Font used for raku welcome message

2021-08-27 Thread James Cloos
> "NG" == Norman Gaywood writes: NG> On Linux (various versions), if I ssh to another system and start the raku NG> REPL , I am greeted with: NG> Welcome to 퐑퐚퐤퐮퐝퐨™ v2021.08. NG> Implementing the 퐑퐚퐤퐮™ programming language v6.d. U+1D411 is MATHEMATICAL BOLD CAPITAL R. The others are also

Re: Font used for raku welcome message

2021-08-27 Thread Andinus via perl6-users
Norman Gaywood @ 2021-08-27 11:20 IST: > On Linux (various versions), if I ssh to another system and start the raku > REPL , I am greeted with: > > Welcome to 퐑퐚퐤퐮퐝퐨™ v2021.08. > Implementing the 퐑퐚퐤퐮™ programming language v6.d. > > On some systems, this is displayed as (embedded graphic): > >

Font used for raku welcome message

2021-08-26 Thread Norman Gaywood
On Linux (various versions), if I ssh to another system and start the raku REPL , I am greeted with: Welcome to 퐑퐚퐤퐮퐝퐨™ v2021.08. Implementing the 퐑퐚퐤퐮™ programming language v6.d. On some systems, this is displayed as (embedded graphic): [image: image.png] While others: [image: image.png]