Mailinglist Archive: opensuse-m17n (52 mails)
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Problem Resolved
- From: khchan2@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Sat, 17 Nov 2001 07:48:37 +0000 (UTC)
- Message-id: <1005983352.3bf61678ac1bf.26579.khchan2@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
My earlier problem of character alignment has been resolved
by only a click - I disabled Anti-aliasing and all the display
problems in Kate and kwrite are resolved.
Although Anti-aliasing seems to work on your system, for unknown
reasons it doesn't work for me. Perhaps later on I will do more
tests and see if there is anything I can come up with.
The reason I asked if there are alternate Chinese fonts is that
the Arphic fonts installed are very difficult even to identify
the characters themselves at small font sizes (around 12).
In Windows the default "mingti" font is quite readable at small
font sizes, but this is not the case for Arphic. Both Chinese and
Latin characters are not that easy to look at.
I heard that KDE 3 has better support for i18n and non-Latin
characters. Did anyone try the Alpha1 release?
by only a click - I disabled Anti-aliasing and all the display
problems in Kate and kwrite are resolved.
Although Anti-aliasing seems to work on your system, for unknown
reasons it doesn't work for me. Perhaps later on I will do more
tests and see if there is anything I can come up with.
The reason I asked if there are alternate Chinese fonts is that
the Arphic fonts installed are very difficult even to identify
the characters themselves at small font sizes (around 12).
In Windows the default "mingti" font is quite readable at small
font sizes, but this is not the case for Arphic. Both Chinese and
Latin characters are not that easy to look at.
I heard that KDE 3 has better support for i18n and non-Latin
characters. Did anyone try the Alpha1 release?
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