Re: strange looking fonts.

2000-10-10 Thread Seth Arnold
* Olaf Meeuwissen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [001009 22:58]: > > What I would imagine to fix your problem is to edit your > > /etc/X11/XF86Config file. I bet the 100dpi fonts are listed before the > > 75 dpi fonts. If so, swap their order and restart X. > You could also just purge the xfonts-100dpi packag

Re: strange looking fonts.

2000-10-10 Thread Olaf Meeuwissen
Seth Arnold <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Russell, the debian-x mail list (in recent times anyway) is more > intended for developers and ginuea pigs of XF86 4.0. debian-users is > more appropriate. > > What I would imagine to fix your problem is to edit your > /etc/X11/XF86Config file. I bet the

Re: strange looking fonts.

2000-10-09 Thread Olaf Meeuwissen
Seth Arnold <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Russell, the debian-x mail list (in recent times anyway) is more > intended for developers and ginuea pigs of XF86 4.0. debian-users is > more appropriate. > > What I would imagine to fix your problem is to edit your > /etc/X11/XF86Config file. I bet the

Re: strange looking fonts.

2000-10-08 Thread Seth Arnold
Russell, the debian-x mail list (in recent times anyway) is more intended for developers and ginuea pigs of XF86 4.0. debian-users is more appropriate. What I would imagine to fix your problem is to edit your /etc/X11/XF86Config file. I bet the 100dpi fonts are listed before the 75 dpi fonts. If s

strange looking fonts.

2000-10-08 Thread Russell Davies
Hi, I'm a long time unix user -- I've just recently installed debian on my home system, basically my problem boils down to fonts not looking "right" in X, where right is defined as to what I usually expect with my combination of software. I use twm and X eve