On Mon, Dec 8, 2008 at 12:32 PM, James E. Bailey <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Am 08.12.2008 um 19:06 schrieb Trevor Bača:
>
> On Thu, Dec 4, 2008 at 7:06 AM, james <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> After much searching, I found it. Fontbook installs user-installed fonts
>> to a directory that isn
Am 08.12.2008 um 19:06 schrieb Trevor Bača:
On Thu, Dec 4, 2008 at 7:06 AM, james <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
After much searching, I found it. Fontbook installs user-installed
fonts to a directory that isn't indexed by fontconfig ~/Library/
Fonts. After I realised that, I knew to tell fontb
On Thu, Dec 4, 2008 at 7:06 AM, james <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> After much searching, I found it. Fontbook installs user-installed fonts to
> a directory that isn't indexed by fontconfig ~/Library/Fonts. After I
> realised that, I knew to tell fontbook to install my fonts system-wide,
> apparen
Johan Vromans wrote:
While at the subject...
To change the default fonts for a document, the advised code is:
\paper {
myStaffSize = #20
#(define fonts
(make-pango-font-tree "Times New Roman"
"Nimbus Sans"
"Luxi Mono"
After much searching, I found it. Fontbook installs user-installed
fonts to a directory that isn't indexed by fontconfig ~/Library/
Fonts. After I realised that, I knew to tell fontbook to install my
fonts system-wide, apparently, osx doesn't use ~/.fonts/ which
fontconfig does index.
___
> Well, to be completely explicit, it lists the fonts that lilypond
> installs by name, and then the directories for the system fonts.
This is not correct. It lists all fonts which have been registered by
fontconfig (plus the OTF and PFB fonts from lilypond).
> I just don't know what name to cal
Oops, I looked more closely at the list, and it does name all the
system fonts. I just don't see palatino in the list.
Am 04.12.2008 um 12:01 schrieb Mats Bengtsson:
Did you read
http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.11/Documentation/user/lilypond/
Fonts#Fonts-explained
In particular, it explains how
Well, to be completely explicit, it lists the fonts that lilypond
installs by name, and then the directories for the system fonts. I
just don't know what name to call the system fonts by.
I've tried the file name and the name that shows up in fontbook, but
nothing so far works.
Am 04.12.200
I did. I have the list of all the fonts. Well, I have the directories
that the available fonts are in. If that actually listed font names
accepted, it would be perfect! Is there another option to do this?
Am 04.12.2008 um 12:01 schrieb Mats Bengtsson:
Did you read
http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.
Am 04.12.2008 um 01:02 schrieb Neil Puttock:
Hi James,
2008/12/3 james <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
I'm not understanding how font switching in a \markup block works.
I thought
that I could just do \markup \override #'(fontname . #'Courier)
{test} and
it would work, but it doesn't. Is there some o
Did you read
http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.11/Documentation/user/lilypond/Fonts#Fonts-explained
In particular, it explains how to obtain a list over all fonts on your
system that are available
to LilyPond.
/Mats
james wrote:
Am 04.12.2008 um 06:41 schrieb Jan van Dijk:
Op Thursday 04 Dece
"Neil Puttock" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> http://lilypond.org/doc/v2.11/Documentation/user/lilypond/Fonts#Single-entry-fonts
While at the subject...
To change the default fonts for a document, the advised code is:
\paper {
myStaffSize = #20
#(define fonts
(make-pango-font-tr
Am 04.12.2008 um 06:41 schrieb Jan van Dijk:
Op Thursday 04 December 2008 00:47:52 schreef james:
I'm not understanding how font switching in a \markup block works. I
thought that I could just do \markup \override #'(fontname .
#'Courier) {test} and it would work, but it doesn't. Is there some
Am 04.12.2008 um 06:41 schrieb Jan van Dijk:
Op Thursday 04 December 2008 00:47:52 schreef james:
I'm not understanding how font switching in a \markup block works. I
thought that I could just do \markup \override #'(fontname .
#'Courier) {test} and it would work, but it doesn't. Is there some
Jan van Dijk wrote:
Op Thursday 04 December 2008 00:47:52 schreef james:
I'm not understanding how font switching in a \markup block works. I
thought that I could just do \markup \override #'(fontname .
#'Courier) {test} and it would work, but it doesn't. Is there some
other command that I've
Op Thursday 04 December 2008 00:47:52 schreef james:
> I'm not understanding how font switching in a \markup block works. I
> thought that I could just do \markup \override #'(fontname .
> #'Courier) {test} and it would work, but it doesn't. Is there some
> other command that I've missed?
>
>
> ___
Hi James,
2008/12/3 james <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I'm not understanding how font switching in a \markup block works. I thought
> that I could just do \markup \override #'(fontname . #'Courier) {test} and
> it would work, but it doesn't. Is there some other command that I've missed?
Have a look at
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