I just installed SuSE 9.0 on a new laptop and have Yasted all the updates. My Fonts in Gnucash looked crumply so I went to KDE Control Center and tried changing a Font or 2 to no avail. I then selected the Defaults and it swithced to "Nimbus" rather than one was originally in the fresh install. Now I have even worse fonts and can't find a way back. No matter what I select even with antialiasing looks crummy and chicken scratchy. Thanks for any help:
In a previous message, Thom Nuzum
My Fonts in Gnucash looked crumply so I went to KDE Control Center
Two things there. First, GnuCash is a Gnome application so the KDE control center won't have much effect on it. Second, it's a Gnome1 application and so doesn't support antialiased fonts. Although a gtk2 port is under way ATM. To change the fonts used in GnuCash, use the gnome1 control center, which is on the SUSE disks - you're looking for gnomecc. John -- John Pettigrew Headstrong Games john@headstrong-games.co.uk Fun : Strategy : Price http://www.headstrong-games.co.uk/ Board games that won't break the bank Valley of the Kings: ransack an ancient Egyptian tomb but beware of mummies!
Thanks John, I tried both MS Money and Quicken which came with my laptop (missing features). I like gnucash so far. does invoices and has lots of information. On Wednesday 31 March 2004 11:12, John Pettigrew wrote:
In a previous message, Thom Nuzum
wrote: My Fonts in Gnucash looked crumply so I went to KDE Control Center
Two things there. First, GnuCash is a Gnome application so the KDE control center won't have much effect on it. Second, it's a Gnome1 application and so doesn't support antialiased fonts. Although a gtk2 port is under way ATM.
To change the fonts used in GnuCash, use the gnome1 control center, which is on the SUSE disks - you're looking for gnomecc.
John
... selected the Defaults and it
swithced to "Nimbus" rather than one was originally in the fresh install. Now I have even worse fonts and can't find a way back. No matter what I select even with antialiasing looks crummy and chicken scratchy. I wonder if this is because of the true type fonts installed conflicting with KDE? I thought I has Sans Fonts, but they are gone now too.
I ran SuSEconfig -module fonts and rebooted. So I'm stuck with Nimbus. Looks good now. What happened to Sans Fonts? They are still there in root. (I hate dealing with fonts more than anything)
participants (2)
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John Pettigrew
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Thom Nuzum