On Mar 7, 9:37 pm, Tony Mechelynck <[email protected]> wrote: > On 07/03/10 20:25, Olivier Gu ry wrote: > > Last, I realy miss a proportionnal font. Whatever one say, a clean > > proportionnal font, with ligatures, is great for writing. If gvim > > could use pango or wathever I ll be realy happy ! (I saw that it s > > possible on emacs-gui, but I realy prefer the ergonomi in vim). > > Nothing s never perfect ! > > Actually, on X11 systems, gvim with GTK2 GUI does use Pango, but it > still uses a fixed-size character cell. GTK2 gvim will allow you to set > any installed font as 'guifont', but proportional fonts look ugly then, > because in the fixed-size cell, thin characters such as l look lonely > and fat one such as m look cramped or even clipped.
Ok. I don’t know anything about programming ! I’ve just read that it’s pango that’s used for texts in gtk. And found it doing a realy great job (utf, liga, etc.). I well understand the importance of « fix-cell » and « grid text » for programming usage of vim and the may we move in the text. It sound logical to me. But for huge « dense » text, proportionnal will be beter. Do you think there’s a chance for the dev to made use able to use proportional fonts ? I don’t want bother devs with that since it must be one of the huge FAQ they get ;) Regards, Olivier. -- You received this message from the "vim_use" maillist. Do not top-post! Type your reply below the text you are replying to. For more information, visit http://www.vim.org/maillist.php
