2014-09-03 22:46 GMT+02:00 Lorna Evans <lorna_ev...@sil.org>:
It came from the Nikosh.ttf file. I have Microsoft Font Properties
Extension
installed and with that installed I can right click on a .ttf and
select
"Properties" and it gives me a whole range of tabs full of info
that were
not available without the extension. I don't know how you would
find this
info on other Operating Systems.
Maybe fontforge?
Yes, fontforge can do this.
Open the font file with fontforge,
then select "Elements"->"Font info".
(As a quick hack, if you don't want to install fontforge,
the License is usually also contained as an utf-8 string. So just
doing a dump e.g. with:
hexdump -C path/to/font/file | less
or using a hex capable edtior:
vim -b path/to/font/file
will make it easy to find the license (usually at the beginning if the
font file.
It might also be stored as an utf-16 string, which makes it a bit
harder to read.
This is really just a hack.)
best,
Stefan
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