w regular". This would not
allow them to operate as a family.
Ralph DiMola
IT Director
Evergreen Information Services
rdim...@evergreeninfo.net
-Original Message-
From: Dan Friedman [mailto:d...@clearvisiontech.com]
Sent: Tuesday, August 27, 2019 6:54 PM
T
Services
rdim...@evergreeninfo.net
-Original Message-
From: Dan Friedman [mailto:d...@clearvisiontech.com]
Sent: Tuesday, August 27, 2019 6:54 PM
To: rdim...@evergreeninfo.net; 'How to use LiveCode'
Subject: Re: Fonts on Android
Ralph,
Than
family.
Ralph DiMola
IT Director
Evergreen Information Services
rdim...@evergreeninfo.net
-Original Message-
From: Dan Friedman [mailto:d...@clearvisiontech.com]
Sent: Tuesday, August 27, 2019 6:54 PM
To: rdim...@evergreeninfo.net; 'How to use LiveCode'
Subject: Re: Fonts on Android
I thought the engine was supposed to do this automatically. If a bold
version of the font is available, it should be substituted by name.
On 8/27/19 5:53 PM, Dan Friedman via use-livecode wrote:
Only thing I can think to do is to run thought EVERY object in my project and set the textFont of th
Ralph,
Thank you for the reply. But, I don’t see how this helps. I have two fonts:
Barlow-Bold.ttf
Barlow-Regular.ttf
After running FontInfo(), I see this:
*Barlow Bold
bold
*Barlow Regular
plain
When I set the font of my stack to "Barlow", everything (bold or not) comes up
as Barlow Bold.
When I run into this problem I use the routine below to enumerate all the
fonts and their styles.
If you have both a "Plain" and "Bold" style for a font then you use the font
name and set its style to "Bold"
If you use a "bold" base font then its "plain" style IS the bold font and
setting its style