-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] character kerning
Date: Fri, 8 Feb 2013 14:56:52 +0100
From: Claude Fiefel <claude.fie...@orange.fr>
To: webmaster-Kracked_P_P <webmas...@krackedpress.com>
un conseil prenez donc un traducteur en français for me finish libre
office ok
Le 8 févr. 2013 à 14:53, webmaster-Kracked_P_P
<webmas...@krackedpress.com <mailto:webmas...@krackedpress.com>> a écrit :
On 02/08/2013 01:26 AM, Jay Lozier wrote:
On 02/08/2013 01:06 AM, e-letter wrote:
On 07/02/2013, webmaster-Kracked_P_P <webmas...@krackedpress.com
<mailto:webmas...@krackedpress.com>> wrote:
On 02/07/2013 01:37 AM, e-letter wrote:
On 05/02/2013, webmaster-Kracked_P_P <webmas...@krackedpress.com
<mailto:webmas...@krackedpress.com>> wrote:
Since 'liberation serif' is a font that most people outside of the
LO/Linux world would not be using, I think you should look into a
more
common font used by publishing houses. I would look into
changing the
fonts used and see which one works best for your needs. If you are
dealing with a publisher, ask which fonts they use.
Is there a "cross-platform" font available, in both sans serif and
serif
styles?
Are you asking if there is one font that is installed on most Windows,
MacOSX, and Linux OS installs? Or are you asking if there is a
font set
that can be installed on them?
Ideally yes, otherwise a font in gnu/linux that has equivalents in the
other systems.
The problem really is not with your systems, but what others have
installedon there. If you want your document to work on their systems,
with the same font and such, you must embed the fonts in their
documents.
Understood for pdf, but for odf it would be nice if a document could
be distributed for editing and the font remained unchanged.
AFAIK Arial, Calibri, Times New Roman, and Courier are available for
both Linux and Windows. I do not know the equivalents for Mac.
There are thousands of fonts that can be found that can be installed
on Windows, Linux, and MacOSX, the exact font and not worry about an
equivalents. The key would be dealing with fonts that are already
installed by others, so they do not need to install a new one.
Here is a free site
http://www.1001freefonts.com/ <http://www.1001freefonts.com/>
They show Windows and Mac downloads, but both are TTF font formats.
So if MacOSX used TTF fonts, then the same font file can be used for
Windows, Linux, and MacOSX.
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