The Adobe Utopia scalable fonts from X11R5, as well as 13 other Type 1 fonts licensed from Adobe, are in the atm package and are installed by default. Type 1 scalable fonts are rendered using Adobe Type Manager® (ATM®), which is integrated into the font server of UnixWare; if ATM is installed, the contributed Type 1 renderer from X11R5 is removed from the system. The contributed Speedo renderer from X11R5 is part of the dtxtfonts package, but the Speedo outline fonts from X11R5 are not included in any package.
The X11R5 font aliases for the Xview system, such as lucidasans-10, have been removed from this release of UnixWare.
When setting your monitor size, note that monitor manufacturers sometimes exaggerate the size (usually quoted as a diagonal size, like 21 inches);
if precision in your fonts (or other measures) on your display is important,
you may want to measure
your monitor size (height and width) by hand and use the sizes you obtain in your configuration.
New values take affect the next time the X server is started.
The X server uses the configured graphics card resolution, such as VGA (640x480) or 1024x768, expressed in pixels, and the monitor size, in inches, to determine the effective DPI (dots per inch) of your screen for applications. This DPI value affects your fonts in two ways.
First, scalable outline fonts rendered by ATM use the DPI figure in figuring out how many pixels to use to make a font for a requested point size. Second, the Display Setup application adjusts font configuration files if the DPI figure is closer to 100dpi than to 75dpi (e.g., for high-resolution graphics card/monitor combinations): it makes the 100dpi directory appear first in the font path so bitmapped fonts closer to the real resolution of the monitor are used.
Note also that the DPI value is computed for both the vertical and horizontal direction. If your monitor size does not reflect the same width/height ratio as the graphics card resolution (e.g., the 4/3 ratio of VGA and 1024/768), these DPI values will differ slightly. This is not a problem unless exact precision is needed.
Motif does not do this, and so the user sees a difference: Note that, especially if your graphic card/monitor configuration is not precise, subtleties in the way default font sizes are used can make the default Helvetica font used in some applications a little smaller or larger (usually smaller). For example, when you first run the Desktop, the font used in the Fonts application may appear smaller than that used in the window manager (e.g., for window titles). This difference can be eliminated by using the Apply to Windows menu item in the Fonts application to change your desktop font to another font, and then back to Helvetica Medium 12-point, expressly chosen and applied (using the Restore Defaults menu item will maintain the small size difference).
Duplicate point sizes sometimes appear in the scrolling list for Point Size. This is usually caused by a font having the same FAMILY name but a different character set or AVERAGE_WIDTH. Use the View - Character Set menu button and you will see the differences in the fonts.
Fonts that do not contain the ISO8859-1 character set, whether they are the ASCII-only iso646.1991-irv fonts or Hebrew or Japanese fonts, cannot be used with the Apply to Windows feature of the Fonts application.
Some underlying changes in how X handles font names between X11R4 and X11R5 affect the Fonts application. One consequence is that if you run the current UnixWare (based on X11R5) Fonts client on a display whose X server is X11R4, such as UnixWare 1.x, then some scalable fonts on that server--those for which bitmapped fonts of the same family and style exist--will not show up in the Fonts window as scalable; the Point Size scrolling list will show only the pointsizes of the bitmapped font.
These standard CDE names are implemented for the UnixWare X Server, even though CDE 1.0 itself is not part of UnixWare. When this package is installed, a CDE desktop running on some other machine in a network may display on a UnixWare machine's X display. The names are in the Graphics Supplemental Fonts package (dtxtfonts); this package must be installed for the names to be available.
All the CDE standard fonts names have a FAMILY_NAME field of -dt-.
A listing of them can thus be obtained with the command:
xlsfonts -fn -dt-*