LibreOffice respects fontconfig settings. Note: most websites have their own font styles, so each web page can have different display fonts. You can also change different Sans Serif, Serif and Monospace fonts in Firefox Preferences. By default, it uses the Sans Serif font of the system for UI and default web page font. These settings only affect GTK applications.įirefox respects fontconfig settings. GNOME doesn't provide options to change default UI fonts and it doesn't follow fontconfig rules. System Settings -> Application Styles -> GNOME/GTK Application Styles (Change GNOME/GTK application default fonts) System Settings -> Fonts -> Font Settings (ONLY affect KDE/Qt applications) Fontweak, modify personal font configuration file.YaST -> Fonts, modify system font configuration file.If you don't want to edit the configuration files, you can use a GUI frontend of fontconfig: It is a rule set in XML configuration files. Usually, Sans Serif will be used as the default UI font while Monospace will be used for text editors and console.įontconfig decides which actual font should be Sans Serif, Serif and Monospace font. Sans Serif (sans-serif), Serif (serif) and Monospace (monospace) are three special font families. This will only affect Qt/GTK applications. User font configuration file ~/.config/fontconfig/nf.Editable system font configuration file /etc/fonts/nf.Preset system font configuration file /etc/fonts/nf (should NOT be edited, edit /etc/fonts/nf instead).Configuration files of font packages /etc/fonts/config.d/ (should NOT be edited).The default font is selected by several conditions in the following order (later one overrides previous one): ![]() Your system is installed with a lot of fonts, but which one does the system use for your desktop user interface? What if you want to change it? You need to install the font-manager package from OBS. But there is a very good GTK+ font manager. GNOME doesn't officially have a font management tool. System Settings -> Fonts -> Font Management Note: newly installed fonts are invisible until you restart applications or system. You can also simply copy font files to ~/.local/share/fonts folder. Installing as personal font is recommended if other users do not need it. In KDE, The Font Install tool shows preview text of the font, and there are two buttons: install as system font and install as personal font. If you have font files (*.otf, *.ttf), click to open the files with the font installation application. ![]() If the font you want to install is provided by openSUSE online repositories, use YaST or zypper to install the package. Only the user himself/herself can use it while other users cannot. Personal fonts are usually installed in ~/.local/share/fonts/ directory.These fonts can be used by all users on the machine. System fonts must be installed in the /usr/share/fonts/ directory.If you would like to try new fonts, add the repository manually and update. ![]() ![]() M17N:fonts repository provides a larger collection of fonts. In YaST Software Management, you can search "font" or browse "Font" category to find all available fonts in official repositories. Since there are so many fonts and they can use a lot of disk space, most fonts are not installed by default. Installed by default Available in official repositories An overview of already packaged fonts can be found on our fontinfo website: OpenSUSE contains many high-quality, free and open source fonts. 3.1 Fontconfig: sans, serif and mono fonts.1.3 Available on openSUSE Build Service.
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