Google commissions another Arial substiture, Arimo, for use on ChromeOS. Red Hat commissions an Arial substitute, Liberation Sans, for use on Linux.
Fontdoc for windows free#
However it can not be included in Free Desktop systems for licensing reasons. Due to its long and wide availability, Arial is now used in many documents.
Fontdoc for windows windows#
Microsoft ships Windows with the Arial font family. The fontconfig rules for DejaVu Sans SHOULD declare it can be substituted for Bitstream Vera Sans. The GNOME project releases the Bitstream Vera set of font families later the DejaVu project forks and extends those fonts. The fontconfig rules for Foo Sans SHOULD declare any missing glyph can be taken from the sans-serif generic font family. Fontconfig will present the result as a single wide-encoding family to applications, even if the files remain split on-disk, even if all of them are not installed. The fontconfig rules for Universal Foo MUST rewrite the family (and therefore fullname) for all Universal Foo Hebrew and Universal Foo Thai font files, so they declare Universal Foo instead. To allow installing only part of this family, it splits it in Universal Foo, Universal Foo Hebrew and Universal Foo Thai. The Foo project releases the Universal Foo wide-coverage font family. The fontconfig rules for Foo Narrow Oblique MUST rewrite it to the recommended WWS-compliant family: Foo and style: Narrow Oblique (Name ID 16/17 or 21/22). Because the font maker remembers early font formats only allowed 4-style family grouping ( Name ID 1 and 2), it declares it as family: Foo Narrow and style: Oblique. The Foo project releases Foo Narrow Oblique.
![fontdoc for windows fontdoc for windows](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/50/89/f3/5089f308cf205d9eeed450580a7678e4.jpg)
![fontdoc for windows fontdoc for windows](https://www.codeproject.com/KB/docview/dfv/dfv.gif)
Installation (RPM) package break-up: font packages.