On 03/04/2011 5:23 PM, Liviu Andronic wrote:
On Sun, Apr 3, 2011 at 11:18 PM, Julien Rioux
<jri...@physics.utoronto.ca> wrote:
I get a bit further...
kpathsea: Invalid fontname `Linux Libertine O', contains ' '
kpathsea: Invalid fontname `Linux Libertine O/BI', contains ' '
kpathsea: Invalid fontname `Linux Biolinum O', contains ' '
kpathsea: Invalid fontname `Linux Biolinum O/B', contains ' '
kpathsea: Invalid fontname `Linux Biolinum O/I', contains ' '
kpathsea: Invalid fontname `Linux Biolinum O/BI', contains ' '
I selected Libertine and Biolinum in the Fonts dialogue. You need to
install (on Ubuntu) ttf-linux-libertine. Alternatively, select DejaVu
Serif and Sans or any other font that features Russian and Greek
chars. Then the document should compile.
Liviu
when I uncheck the use non-TeX Fonts mark it compiles but has strange
characters in the output
--
Julien
Selecting Deja Vu... Nice! works and no converter error popup, so I
think that's fixed.
But there is a different bug here. I did suspect that you selected these
fonts, so I went to the Fonts dialog, but the fonts were on default!
Actually, when I open the .lyx file in a text editor, I can see that
Libertine is used. Libertine is not in the list of available fonts in my
LyX fonts pane, so I can't select it. But it's weird that it would show
Default when in reality Libertine was selected.
--
Julien