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After a recent system update, the default GNOME interface font (whatever it is) on my installation appears to be missing Cyrillic characters. Notice how the Russian part of the filename in this Nautilus screenshot appears to be in DejaVu Sans:
I’m blaming this on the update because the look of the Latin characters appears to have changed somewhat as well (though not enough to qualify as a new font).
Last edited by alex.shpilkin (2018-02-12 13:19:25)
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DISPLAY=:0 FC_DEBUG=4 pango-view --font=sans -t _missing_cyrillic_letter_here_ | grep family:
fc-match "sans"
fc-match "DejaVu Sans"
But you should really figure which font family is actually configured for gnome/nautilus
The lating glyphs look like the condensed variant while the cyrillic test seems slightly boldened?
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But you should really figure which font family is actually configured for gnome/nautilus
Cantarell, the default GNOME font, and the Cyrillic glyphs end up being substituted by DejaVu Sans. Sorry, should’ve done my homework: the NEWS for cantarell-fonts do state that the latest v0.100 is a complete redesign and is missing everything but Latin. Shame, guess I’ll have to downgrade and hold for now, the two fonts are unbearably ugly side by side.
Marking this topic as solved.
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