Install Microsoft Fonts Opensuse Repositories
Descriptionmicrosoft-trebuchet-fonts - Microsoft Trebuchet font family PropertyValueDistributionRepositoryPackage filenamemicrosoft-trebuchet-fonts-1.23-5.15.noarch.rpmPackage namemicrosoft-trebuchet-fontsPackage version1.23Package release5.15Package architecturenoarchPackage typerpmCategorySystem/X11/FontsHomepage-LicenseMicrosoftMaintainer-Download size244.25 KBInstalled size515.31 KBAlternatives PackageVersionArchitectureRepository-Requires NameValue-Provides NameValuemicrosoft-trebuchet-fonts= 1.23-5.15.
.AboutopenSUSE is an open, free and secure operating system for PC, laptops, servers and ARM devices. Managing your emails, browsing the web, watching online streams, playing games, serving websites or doing office work never felt this empowering. And best part? It's not only backed by one of the leaders in open source industry, but also driven by lively community. You shouldn't need to add the subpixel stuff - the dev has said in the past that basically everything has been added into freetype upstream.You can just use sysconfig settings to turn on the LCD filter, hintings and subpixel (which honestly, as this point in time, I have no idea why they don't default to on - who's still running a CRT?).It can also be done via symlinking the config files appropriately.And with the new repos and TW being setup, no one should be using Factory repos unless they are ACTUALLY running Factory.
Install Microsoft Fonts Opensuse Repositories 10
(Disclaimer: there are many projects that haven't really updated fully yet.)Edit: Especially for what you're doing - the patches only really supply the full set of configs to make it render like other OS's. There are some lcdfilter patches as well, but there are some in freetype2 already, just not the MS one as it's still patent encumbered. Furthermore there's no TW namtrac:subpixel repo.That's the point - with the changing of all the new repo setups, you should only really use TW repos, and if it doesn't exist, then you shouldn't really use it without REALLY knowing what you're doing.You can just use YaST2 /etc/sysconfig and the go under Desktop setting to find the system wide settings for hinting, autohint, lcdfilter, and subpixel filtering, all with nice little pull downs.The 'standard' Linux way is to just go to /etc/fonts and link the configs. The KDE way is to go into display settings and turn on per user settings to select them from the GUI. Before the last maybe 1.5 years, most people needed infinality patches to make the fonts look how they want. But most of that works' patent restrictions have ended and got merged in Freetype 2.4 (I believe).
Opensuse Tumbleweed Kernel
And that's when Adobe donated it's full hinting engine as well. And that engine is the default in 2.5.So, unless you want to make super typographical changes to font rendering or want to have it exactly match another OS setup (even if might be 'technically' worse - font rendering tends to be heavy in the subjective), then you can still use those patches.But for just turning on basic LCD/cleartype improvements, nothing fancy is needed anymore, just figuring out where you distro puts the options.Freetype has been doing tons of work lately to keep upgrading rendering tech.Really, the only thing missing is the MS LCD Filter. That may be part of the infinality subpixel stuff, I'm not sure.And of course, if you still don't get what you want with the build-in stuff, then go play with the repos to fine tune.edit: typos and formatting.