Hi Jean-Julien,
Le 10/07/2020 à 10:34, Jean-Julien Fleck a écrit :
Hello Urs,
Le ven. 10 juil. 2020 à 09:03, Urs Liska <li...@openlilylib.org
<mailto:li...@openlilylib.org>> a écrit :
But I'd like to repeat that the fonts created by Abraham (including
Gonville) are at least partially available as free fonts, and they
already *can* be used in a regular LilyPond installation without any
hassles.
All you need to do is copy (or better link) the font files in the
fonts
directory (Frescobaldi even offers a nice interface for handling that
for arbitrary new LilyPond installations) and add some code to the
paper block of your document.
The manual procedure is described at
http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.20/Documentation/notation/replacing-the-notation-font.en.html
I guess you can also just open the dedicated Frescobaldi interface and
follow the steps.
If you use openLilyLib this is as easy as \useNotationFont Gonville.
The notation-fonts package even provides (optional) default
stylesheets
for all supported fonts (to provide a good starting point regarding
e.g. line thicknesses).
Could you please give us a link that explains how to do that
installation ?
I've been searching (a bit) ever since the page
https://github.com/OpenLilyPondFonts appeared in this thread but
couldn't find a tutorial to explain step by step what to do. I would
have expected that such an explanation to be placed in the README.md
file at the top of each font repository, at least pointing to a place
explaining the generic way to do it but I couldn't find any.
Is there such a step-by-step tutorial and where can I find it ?
What Urs describes is an openLilyLib package, so you want to get started
with openLilyLib first.
https://www.openlilylib.org/getstarted/install.html, perhaps?
Regards,
Jean Abou Samra