font installation
Zdenek Wagner
zdenek.wagner at gmail.com
Fri Jun 21 21:10:34 CEST 2024
pá 21. 6. 2024 v 20:40 odesílatel Bruno Voisin via tex-live <
tex-live at tug.org> napsal:
> Peter Flynn wrote (speaking of fontconfig and fc-cache):
>
> > What do people on Windows do without these utilities? I assume they
> > exist on Macs.
>
>
> Norbert Preining answered:
>
> > Mac - don't ask me, I have used it for years and still don't understand
> > how this ....load of OS is actually working. Good Hardware, horrible
> > Software.
>
>
> Zdenek Wagner answered:
>
> > I still do not know how to work with fonts on Mac, it sometimes works
> with
> > symlinks, sometimes not. The old models of Raspberry have low power
> > consumption so that they can be powered frm Macbook's USB and connected
> via
> > an ethernet cable (Macbook detects the polarity so you do not care which
> > type to use). My Raspberries are configured to get the IP address from
> DHCP
> > thus I configured the DHCP server on Mac but only on ethernet, not on
> WiFi.
> > Thus I know how to find the IP address of the Raspberry and can ssh to
> it.
> > I have a SSH server running on Mac thus when I am on the Raspberry, I can
> > mount a directory from the Mac via sshfs. I thus run TeX on the Raspberry
> > using the mounted directory and use a text editor and PDF viewver on the
> > Mac. And all my fonts are in texmf-local and due to limited space, I have
> > only one version of TL on the Raspberry. My texmf-local is on my
> subversion
> > server. Thus I install the fonts into texmf-local on one of my Linux
> > computers, do "svn ci" and after "svn up" on the Raspberry fc-cache just
> > happens and the fonts are known to Xe(La)TeX. I do not know how it works
> > internaly but it works.
>
>
> Seeing the above, I couldn't resist, and decided to chime in. I assume
> fontconfig and fc-cache can be installed on macOS (like with MacPorts or
> Homebrew), and TeX configured to use them, but they're not needed and TeX
> (as installed by MacTeX) does not use them by default.
>
>
> Font locations
> ==============
>
> Fonts on macOS are installed in either of
>
> ~/Library/Fonts -> user-specific fonts
> /Library/Fonts -> local fonts, seen by all users
> /Network/Library/Fonts -> network fonts
>
> which can be modified by the user (depending on their admin rights), and
>
> /System/Library/Fonts -> system fonts
> /System/Library/AssetsV2/com_apple_MobileAsset_Font7 ->
> downloadable fonts
>
> which cannot be modified.
>
> The downloadable fonts are system fonts which are not installed by
> default. They are alternative fonts, often for additional scripts (the
> precise list of installed fonts and scripts depends on the locale chosen at
> installation time), or soon-to-be deprecated fonts. They are visible in the
> Font Book application, in which they can be downloaded from the Apple
> servers. They are also downloaded automatically when you open a document or
> application that uses them.
>
> As I write this on macOS 15 Sequoia Beta (the beta of the next macOS, to
> be released this fall), and does minimal testing, I realize the above might
> change, as one of the core OS fonts has been moved in this beta from
>
> /System/Library/Fonts/PingFang.ttc
>
> to
>
>
> /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/FontServices.framework/Resources/Reserved/PingFangUI.ttc
>
> causing XeTeX to fail to use it.
>
>
> LuaTeX
> ======
>
> LuaTeX (via luaotfload) indexes all of
>
> ~/Library/Fonts
> /Library/Fonts
> /System/Library/Fonts
> /Network/Library/Fonts
>
> For it to also index the downloadable fonts directory, you need to add
>
> OSFONTDIR=/System/Library/AssetsV2/com_apple_MobileAsset_Font7//
>
> to your /usr/local/texlive/texmf-local/web2c/texmf.cnf (that's what I do).
>
>
> XeTeX
> =====
>
> For XeTeX, things depend on whether the fonts are called by font name or
> file name:
>
> - For a font name call, XeTeX uses macOS to find the font (instead of
> fontconfig on Linux). Hence the font must be in the above directories, they
> can't be in the texmf trees (see later how to circumvent that). For example
>
> \font\testfont="Menlo" at 11pt
> \testfont Some text
>
> - For a file name call, XeTeX searches the texmf trees and the current
> directory. The macOS font directories aren't searched, you need to use full
> paths, for example
>
> \font\testfont="[/System/Library/Fonts/Menlo.ttc:0]" at 11pt
> \testfont Some text
>
> In order to call by name a font which isn't in the macOS font directories,
> you can
>
> - Copy the font to these directories.
>
> - Place a symlink to the font there. Last I tried (some time ago), this
> worked.
>
> However, there is one drawback to this approach: imagine you do this for
> some TrueType or OpenType font from the texmf trees, this means luaotfload
> will index the font twice, for the original font in the texmf tree and for
> its copy or symlink in the macOS font directory.
>
> Probably innocuous, but there is a way to avoid that: create a new library
> in the Font Book application, and add the font to it. macOS will see the
> font, hence XeTeX will be able to call it by name, but no file duplicate or
> symlink will be created.
>
> This is what I do to make the Lucida OpenType fonts, which are installed
> in texmf-local, visible to macOS:
>
>
>
> Only thing to check with this approach: at times, an OS update may disable
> the fonts in the library, or remove them from it. You just have to
> re-enable or re-add the fonts.
>
> And this is the big pain. I have a huge collection of commercial fonts
especially designed for Czech typography. They do not have free
equivalents. And the fonts reside in many subdirectories. Similarly, I have
recently installed a huge collection of Armenian fonts and they reside in
any subdirectories as well. That's why I rarely use TeX on a Mac.
>
> Bruno Voisin
>
Zdeněk Wagner
https://www.zdenek-wagner.eu/
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