This comes from a previous question, but I've spun it off as a new thread because the topic has changed significantly.
I've had some trouble switching to anti-aliased fonts in KDE. Enabling anti-aliasing disables a large number of nice X fonts, and the remaining selection is meager, including few really usable, simple fonts. Most critically, the default KDE fonts, Helvetica and Courier, are not anti-aliasable, and so new fonts must be selected. Moreover, KDE seems very attached to the default, non-AA font setup, and dislikes reconfiguration. In only a few minutes of usage (having configured the font defaults to the most sensible fonts available) I found, among other things, that kshell was defaulting to a truly horrible font, and one which was so large that the window was now effectively only about 40 characters wide, and that Konqueror was mis-rendering its own default page. The optimal solution would seem to be to get anti-aliasable versions of Helvetica and Courier. Is this possible? Failing that, does anyone know of a set of anti-aliasable fonts which are usable as defaults (meaning that they are legible and avilable in bold/italic/etc versions), and which will not upset kshell, konqueror, and whatever else? -- Geoffrey M. Romer [EMAIL PROTECTED] --- "Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right" -Salvor Hardin "I can't leave you alone with this man! He might be a tenor!" -Fred Astaire