Soon-Son Kwon
2005-Nov-21 08:50 UTC
[Fontconfig] Please include these fonts to the default xorg distribution
Two Korean fonts are released today. The UnFont is lincensed under GPL and the Baekmuk is under BSD. Can anyone in charge of handling fonts issue please check if these fonts can be added to default xorg distribution? You can download them at the following URL. http://kldp.net/projects/unfonts/ http://kldp.net/projects/baekmuk/ Thank you very much. On Sat, 7 Aug 2004 08:45:57 +0900, Soon-Son Kwon <ksoonson@gmail.com> wrote:> Thank you very much for the comments. > > But still I do not fully understand how to add a new font > to the default xorg distribution. What is the detailed license > requirement? Alan''s opinion is what I thought initially. > > I think font is something like picture or novel which does not > need to be freely modified. The font designers won''t like that though > some will. I remember that in the current xorg distribution, > modifiable/non-modifiable fonts are mixed. > > Here are some free font project in Korea. > 1. http://kldp.net/projects/unfonts/ > - almost ready to release within a week. > - current snapshot can be downloaded from > http://chem.skku.ac.kr/~wkpark/project/font/UnFonts/20040805/ ) > > 2. http://kldp.net/projects/baekmuk/ > - actual fonts are in cvs tree > - already included in many linux distributions including debian/gentoo/fedora > > Can anyone please check if these fonts are ready to be included? > We are also planning to apply for government fund for commercial high quality > fonts so that we can purchase the whole rights including free redistribution. > > If xorg distribution can hold more fonts for double-byte character users, > then it would benefit many many people. > > Thanks very much. > > /Shawn > > > > > On Fri, 06 Aug 2004 17:44:09 +0200, Nicolas Mailhot > <nicolas.mailhot@laposte.net> wrote: > > On ven, 2004-08-06 at 08:18 -0700, Alan Coopersmith wrote: > > > xorg@freedesktop.org is the mailing list for xorg, and would be a much > > > better place to discuss adding fonts to the X.Org distribution, so I''ve > > > cc''ed it. > > > > > > I believe the license requirements are that it be some sort of open source > > > license, but that the requirements for fonts are a bit looser than source > > > code. > > > > > > TrueType fonts are the currently preferred format. > > > > And of course the preferred way would be to have a single set of > > consistent truetype fonts with full unicode coverage. > > > > If everyone could just contribute glyphs to a single font family (the > > Vera fonts Bitstream liberated for gnome seems a good base) instead of > > multiplying fonts with partial coverage this would be better for all of > > us. > > > > Cheers, > > > > -- > > Nicolas Mailhot > > > > > > > > > -- > http://kldp.org/~kss >-- http://kldp.org/~kss
Edward G.J. Lee
2005-Nov-21 08:50 UTC
[Xorg] Re: [Fontconfig] adding/distributing new fonts
Hello, On Fri, Aug 06, 2004, Ambrose Li wrote:> Hi, > > On Sat, Aug 07, 2004 at 08:45:57AM +0900, Soon-Son Kwon wrote: > > > I think font is something like picture or novel which does > > not need to be freely modified. The font designers won''t like > > that though some will. I remember that in the current xorg > > distribution, modifiable/non-modifiable fonts are mixed. > > I agree that the designers won''t like it, but I disagree that > fonts need not be freely modified. I can see a couple of reasons > why free fonts should be freely modifiable like free software: > > 1. to correct bugs in the font (e.g., wrong character in a CJK > font), andWe had released Dr. Wang''s Chinese GNU GPL TrueType fonts recently, ftp://cle.linux.org.tw/pub2/fonts/wangfonts ftp://ftp.tnc.edu.tw/pub/freefont/wangnew/ http://cle.linux.org.tw/fonts/wangfonts/> 2. to make other relatively easy improvements (e.g., by merging > a Big5 and a GB font to improve the Unicode coverage)FireFly had released Arphic New Sung too(Arphic PL, GPL-like), http://www.study-area.org/apt/firefly-font/ AR PL New Sung = AR PL Mingti2L Big5 + AR PL SungtiL GB> >From a sort-of user point of view, it would be fine enough if > the designers can be contacted (so the improvements can be > sent), but I have run into fonts where I don''t know who the > designer is. > > Cheers, >Edward
Thank you very much for the comments. But still I do not fully understand how to add a new font to the default xorg distribution. What is the detailed license requirement? Alan''s opinion is what I thought initially. I think font is something like picture or novel which does not need to be freely modified. The font designers won''t like that though some will. I remember that in the current xorg distribution, modifiable/non-modifiable fonts are mixed. Here are some free font project in Korea. 1. http://kldp.net/projects/unfonts/ - almost ready to release within a week. - current snapshot can be downloaded from http://chem.skku.ac.kr/~wkpark/project/font/UnFonts/20040805/ ) 2. http://kldp.net/projects/baekmuk/ - actual fonts are in cvs tree - already included in many linux distributions including debian/gentoo/fedora Can anyone please check if these fonts are ready to be included? We are also planning to apply for government fund for commercial high quality fonts so that we can purchase the whole rights including free redistribution. If xorg distribution can hold more fonts for double-byte character users, then it would benefit many many people. Thanks very much. /Shawn On Fri, 06 Aug 2004 17:44:09 +0200, Nicolas Mailhot <nicolas.mailhot@laposte.net> wrote:> On ven, 2004-08-06 at 08:18 -0700, Alan Coopersmith wrote: > > xorg@freedesktop.org is the mailing list for xorg, and would be a much > > better place to discuss adding fonts to the X.Org distribution, so I''ve > > cc''ed it. > > > > I believe the license requirements are that it be some sort of open source > > license, but that the requirements for fonts are a bit looser than source > > code. > > > > TrueType fonts are the currently preferred format. > > And of course the preferred way would be to have a single set of > consistent truetype fonts with full unicode coverage. > > If everyone could just contribute glyphs to a single font family (the > Vera fonts Bitstream liberated for gnome seems a good base) instead of > multiplying fonts with partial coverage this would be better for all of > us. > > Cheers, > > -- > Nicolas Mailhot > > >-- http://kldp.org/~kss
Edward G.J. Lee
2005-Nov-21 08:50 UTC
[Xorg] Re: [Fontconfig] adding/distributing new fonts
On Sun, Aug 08, 2004, Ambrose Li wrote:> On Sun, Aug 08, 2004 at 11:23:58PM +0800, Edward G.J. Lee wrote: > > > > FireFly had released Arphic New Sung too(Arphic PL, GPL-like), > > > > http://www.study-area.org/apt/firefly-font/ > > > > AR PL New Sung = AR PL Mingti2L Big5 + AR PL SungtiL GB > > Ah, good to know that, since this is almost exactly what I intended > to do. I wonder if they''re going to also add more characters.The purpose of AR PL New Sung is to embed bitmaps into TTF, next release will embed more bitmaps. Thanks to FireFly. But I don''t think it''s easy to add more characters, because we don''t have another free fonts and APL is not GPL compatible. Edward
Thank you very much for your comment. It will be a nice reference for our future work. As for now, the font I mentioned are licensed under GPL and especially the UnFont( http://kldp.net/projects/unfonts/ ) is about to be released within a few days. (wkpark(he is in the To: list of this email also from the beginning) is the maintainer) He hopes that the UnFont can be included to the current xorg distribution so that users do not have to manually setup Korean font. The current xorg distribution does not have nice Korean font so users should always download / setup fonts in Korea. I will let you xorg developers know once the UnFont is released. I hope xorg add this font so that Korean users need not spend too much time in the future. Regards... /Shawn On Fri, 06 Aug 2004 22:51:44 -0400, Jim Gettys <jim.gettys@hp.com> wrote:> Please take a look at the license I worked out with Bitstream > for the Vera fonts. > > It manages to meet free software standards, while protecting > the interests of the font designers to not have their name > on modifications they do not approve of, and ensuring that > they not just be dropped into a font resale system, but allowing > them to be used in any other circumstance freely. > > See http://www.gnome.org/fonts > > Fonts need on-going maintenance (new characters need > to be added from time to time), so unmodifiable fonts end up, > with time, not being all that useful. > Regards, > - Jim Gettys > > > > On Fri, 2004-08-06 at 19:45, Soon-Son Kwon wrote: > > Thank you very much for the comments. > > > > But still I do not fully understand how to add a new font > > to the default xorg distribution. What is the detailed license > > requirement? Alan''s opinion is what I thought initially. > > > > I think font is something like picture or novel which does not > > need to be freely modified. The font designers won''t like that though > > some will. I remember that in the current xorg distribution, > > modifiable/non-modifiable fonts are mixed. > > > > Here are some free font project in Korea. > > 1. http://kldp.net/projects/unfonts/ > > - almost ready to release within a week. > > - current snapshot can be downloaded from > > http://chem.skku.ac.kr/~wkpark/project/font/UnFonts/20040805/ ) > > > > 2. http://kldp.net/projects/baekmuk/ > > - actual fonts are in cvs tree > > - already included in many linux distributions including debian/gentoo/fedora > > > > Can anyone please check if these fonts are ready to be included? > > We are also planning to apply for government fund for commercial high quality > > fonts so that we can purchase the whole rights including free redistribution. > > > > If xorg distribution can hold more fonts for double-byte character users, > > then it would benefit many many people. > > > > Thanks very much. > > > > /Shawn > > > > > > On Fri, 06 Aug 2004 17:44:09 +0200, Nicolas Mailhot > > <nicolas.mailhot@laposte.net> wrote: > > > On ven, 2004-08-06 at 08:18 -0700, Alan Coopersmith wrote: > > > > xorg@freedesktop.org is the mailing list for xorg, and would be a much > > > > better place to discuss adding fonts to the X.Org distribution, so I''ve > > > > cc''ed it. > > > > > > > > I believe the license requirements are that it be some sort of open source > > > > license, but that the requirements for fonts are a bit looser than source > > > > code. > > > > > > > > TrueType fonts are the currently preferred format. > > > > > > And of course the preferred way would be to have a single set of > > > consistent truetype fonts with full unicode coverage. > > > > > > If everyone could just contribute glyphs to a single font family (the > > > Vera fonts Bitstream liberated for gnome seems a good base) instead of > > > multiplying fonts with partial coverage this would be better for all of > > > us. > > > > > > Cheers, > > > > > > -- > > > Nicolas Mailhot > > > > > > > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > xorg mailing list > xorg@freedesktop.org > http://freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/xorg >-- http://kldp.org/~kss
Hi Danilo, On Mon, Aug 09, 2004 at 11:55:48AM +0200, Danilo Segan wrote:> Hi Edward,[...]> There''re many excellent free fonts. You can start with > URW-CYR (35 faces), Computer Modern Unicode (CM Unicode, > another couple of dozen faces, all based on Knuth''s > magnificient Computer Modern family of typefaces ;), Bitstream > Vera, ... There''re other free fonts for non-Latin/Cyrillic > based scripts, but I don''t know much about them (except that > they exist :).Edward was certainly referring to free CJK fonts. Free CJK fonts are indeed still relatively rare. It is still impossible to find a complete set of roman (Ming/Mingcho/Sung), italic (Kai), and sans-serif (Gothic/Hei) fonts with regular and bold weights (and also oblique/"italic" in the case of sans-serif), for example. Decorative and script faces are also difficult to find in general, though Dr Wang''s fonts have improved the situation for Chinese a lot. Fonts are somewhat easier to find in Japanese, but a lot are non-free (in the free software sense of free). With the lack of bold fonts in general, it would be good to revive the tradition of using sans-serif fonts as bold, but it is almost impossible to configure fontconfig or modern word processors etc. to substitute sans-serif for bold :-( Best regards, -- ??? <a.c.li@ieee.org> http://ada.dhs.org/~acli/
On Sun, Aug 08, 2004 at 11:23:58PM +0800, Edward G.J. Lee wrote:> > FireFly had released Arphic New Sung too(Arphic PL, GPL-like), > > http://www.study-area.org/apt/firefly-font/ > > AR PL New Sung = AR PL Mingti2L Big5 + AR PL SungtiL GBAh, good to know that, since this is almost exactly what I intended to do. I wonder if they''re going to also add more characters.
xorg@freedesktop.org is the mailing list for xorg, and would be a much better place to discuss adding fonts to the X.Org distribution, so I''ve cc''ed it. I believe the license requirements are that it be some sort of open source license, but that the requirements for fonts are a bit looser than source code. TrueType fonts are the currently preferred format. -Alan Coopersmith- alan.coopersmith@sun.com Sun Microsystems, Inc. - X Window System Engineering Soon-Son Kwon wrote:> Hi all: > I am Korean user. > At http://freedesktop.org/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/xorg/xc/fonts/encodings/, > there are many fonts which seems to be distributed as default. > > But as for Korean fonts, few fonts are distributed together hence > users should add & configure Korean fonts manually which takes much time > and discourages new users who do not have much experience with X before. > > We already have some free/open Korean fonts and some people are working > on new fonts. If these Korean fonts can be added to the default distrubition, > then it will greatly benefit many people. > > - Can anyone please let me know how to add Korean fonts to the default > xorg source distribution? Is there any approval process? > - What is the license requirement for that fonts? > - What should be the technical font format for this? > > Any comments are welcomed. > > Thanks very much.
Alan Coopersmith
2005-Nov-21 08:50 UTC
[Xorg] Re: [Fontconfig] adding/distributing new fonts
Ambrose Li wrote:> Hi, > > On Sat, Aug 07, 2004 at 08:45:57AM +0900, Soon-Son Kwon wrote: > > >>I think font is something like picture or novel which does >>not need to be freely modified. The font designers won''t like >>that though some will. I remember that in the current xorg >>distribution, modifiable/non-modifiable fonts are mixed. > > > I agree that the designers won''t like it, but I disagree that > fonts need not be freely modified.The middle ground is the license used by the Bitstream Vera fonts (which are the only fonts I know of added to Xorg recently) - they allow changes, but only if you rename your changed version so it''s clear it''s not the work of their designers. http://www.gnome.org/fonts/ -- -Alan Coopersmith- alan.coopersmith@sun.com Sun Microsystems, Inc. - X Window System Engineering
Edward G.J. Lee
2005-Nov-21 08:50 UTC
[Xorg] Re: [Fontconfig] adding/distributing new fonts
Hello Danilo, On Mon, Aug 09, 2004, Danilo ??egan wrote:> Hi Edward, > > Today at 11:22, Edward G. J. Lee wrote: > > > But I don''t think it''s easy to add more characters, because > > we don''t have another free fonts and APL is not GPL compatible. > > There''re many excellent free fonts. You can start with URW-CYR (35 > faces), Computer Modern Unicode (CM Unicode, another couple of dozen > faces, all based on Knuth''s magnificient Computer Modern family of > typefaces ;), Bitstream Vera, ... There''re other free fonts for > non-Latin/Cyrillic based scripts, but I don''t know much about them > (except that they exist :).The problem is the license, URW fonts license under GNU GPL AFAIK. But APL is not GPL compatible. :( Anyway, we have another MBE Arphic font project by Arne Goetje, maybe will have more characters. Currently it fully supports the following charsets: ISO8859-1,2,3,4,7,9,10,13,14,15 Big5 GB2312-80 Modern Bopomofo Extensions for Hakka, Minnan Partly support is implemented for: HKSCS CNS 11643 GB18030 http://debian.linux.org.tw/pub/3Anoppix/people/arne/ Edward
Hi, On Sat, Aug 07, 2004 at 08:45:57AM +0900, Soon-Son Kwon wrote:> I think font is something like picture or novel which does > not need to be freely modified. The font designers won''t like > that though some will. I remember that in the current xorg > distribution, modifiable/non-modifiable fonts are mixed.I agree that the designers won''t like it, but I disagree that fonts need not be freely modified. I can see a couple of reasons why free fonts should be freely modifiable like free software: 1. to correct bugs in the font (e.g., wrong character in a CJK font), and 2. to make other relatively easy improvements (e.g., by merging a Big5 and a GB font to improve the Unicode coverage)>From a sort-of user point of view, it would be fine enough ifthe designers can be contacted (so the improvements can be sent), but I have run into fonts where I don''t know who the designer is. Cheers, -- Ambrose LI Cheuk-Wing <a.c.li@ieee.org> http://ada.dhs.org/~acli/
Hi, On Mon, Aug 09, 2004 at 05:22:18PM +0800, Edward G.J. Lee wrote:> But I don''t think it''s easy to add more characters, because > we don''t have another free fonts and APL is not GPL > compatible.I had asked both Arphic and the FSF about this matter some months ago, though I was not thinking about adding characters from other fonts. It should be ok as long as we construct the new characters from existing parts inside the APL''d fonts themselves, or construct the new characters from scratch. It should not be difficult to add more CJK characters, though of course the quality of the new characters would be lower (in fact I have already started doing it at that time, but stopped shortly afterwards because it took a lot of time and fontforge was using too much memory on my machine). Best regards, -- ??? <a.c.li@ieee.org> http://ada.dhs.org/~acli/
Hi all: I am Korean user. At http://freedesktop.org/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/xorg/xc/fonts/encodings/, there are many fonts which seems to be distributed as default. But as for Korean fonts, few fonts are distributed together hence users should add & configure Korean fonts manually which takes much time and discourages new users who do not have much experience with X before. We already have some free/open Korean fonts and some people are working on new fonts. If these Korean fonts can be added to the default distrubition, then it will greatly benefit many people. - Can anyone please let me know how to add Korean fonts to the default xorg source distribution? Is there any approval process? - What is the license requirement for that fonts? - What should be the technical font format for this? Any comments are welcomed. Thanks very much. -- http://kldp.org/~kss