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bug#67810: 29.1; fonts use synthetic bold on Linux / pgtk
From: |
Eli Zaretskii |
Subject: |
bug#67810: 29.1; fonts use synthetic bold on Linux / pgtk |
Date: |
Wed, 13 Dec 2023 14:39:36 +0200 |
> From: Tim Ruffing <crypto@timruffing.de>
> Date: Wed, 13 Dec 2023 13:03:47 +0100
>
> To reproduce:
> 1. `emacs` -Q on Linux with pgtk enabled
> 2. `M-x select-frame-font` and select a font that doesn't have a
> bold weight
> 3. Observe that the buffer indicator (`*scratch*`) in the status
> line is in bold (using synthetic bold glyphs)
>
> This is annoying in combination with symbol fonts such as Nerd fonts.
> The bold versions of some symbols look strange, and worse, they may be
> too wide to fit two glyphs and are clipped then.
>
> What I have tried:
> * I thought this is a font-config thing. /etc/fonts/conf.d by default
> has a symlink 90-synthetic.conf that sets the "embolden" attribute
> for font queries that ask for a bold font but only regular is
> available. Removing that symlink does make a difference when I try
> `fc-match "MY-FONT:weight=bold" --verbose | grep bold`. With the
> symlink, fc sets the embolden attribute, and without the symlink, it
> doesn't. I can even see the difference in emacs' (Pango) font
> selection dialog. But emacs itself doesn't seem to care about this
> and still creates a synthesized bold font.
> * Cairo is supposed to pick this attribute up [1] and act accordingly,
> but that doesn't work. I tried to add a printf("synthesize: %d\n",
> cairo_ft_font_face_get_synthesize(font_face)); to the current emacs
> git (75fd7550ed6cede6c9e8224f1f2d62637c43fdd4) in ftcrfont_open, and
> this always prints "0" (even with the symlink in place!). AFAIU this
> means that Cairo should never embolden fonts, but some reason
> there's something in emacs that does it.
> * describe-font only shows the medium/regular variant.
Thanks, but why do you think this is an issue for Emacs to solve? I
don't think Emacs creates such "synthesized" fonts; are you sure it
does? I think Emacs just asks fontconfig for a bold font; it has no
knowledge whether it gets a real or a synthetic font.
- bug#67810: 29.1; fonts use synthetic bold on Linux / pgtk, Tim Ruffing, 2023/12/13
- bug#67810: 29.1; fonts use synthetic bold on Linux / pgtk,
Eli Zaretskii <=
- bug#67810: 29.1; fonts use synthetic bold on Linux / pgtk, Tim Ruffing, 2023/12/13
- bug#67810: 29.1; fonts use synthetic bold on Linux / pgtk, Eli Zaretskii, 2023/12/13
- bug#67810: 29.1; fonts use synthetic bold on Linux / pgtk, Tim Ruffing, 2023/12/13
- bug#67810: 29.1; fonts use synthetic bold on Linux / pgtk, Tim Ruffing, 2023/12/13
- bug#67810: 29.1; fonts use synthetic bold on Linux / pgtk, Po Lu, 2023/12/13
- bug#67810: 29.1; fonts use synthetic bold on Linux / pgtk, Eli Zaretskii, 2023/12/14
- bug#67810: 29.1; fonts use synthetic bold on Linux / pgtk, Po Lu, 2023/12/14
- bug#67810: 29.1; fonts use synthetic bold on Linux / pgtk, Tim Ruffing, 2023/12/14
- bug#67810: 29.1; fonts use synthetic bold on Linux / pgtk, Eli Zaretskii, 2023/12/14
- bug#67810: 29.1; fonts use synthetic bold on Linux / pgtk, Po Lu, 2023/12/14