- Arch chinese fonts how to#
- Arch chinese fonts pdf#
- Arch chinese fonts install#
- Arch chinese fonts software#
If you use annotative text and add the 1/8" = 1'-0" scale to it, AutoCAD will do the math for you all you need to do is indicate a paper height of 3/32". For example, if you have a Viewport where the scale is set to 1/8" = 1'-0" (1:96), then in order for the text to plot at 3/32", you have to set the text height to 9", which is 3/32" x 96. If you are placing the text in Model Space, then the text has to be scaled to accommodate the scale factor associated with the Viewport. If you are placing the text in Paper Space, then set your height to 3/32" (or whatever height you want on a full-size plot) and type away. Where are you placing the text, in Paper Space (in the Layout) or in Model Space (on the Model tab, or through an active Viewport on a Layout tab)?
I understand how annotative scaling works but I don't understand how model note height works should be paper size times the reduction factor?
09375" or 1/8" = 0.125" is that the correct font size to use for a scale of 1:1 if not what should I have?
Right now I am working in model space and from my understanding all drawing and text should be drawn to a 1:1 scale so, if I want a text size of 3/32" which is. Ok, this is my first time working with text height in autocad and was wondering if you can explain to me how this works. Other sizes are scaled automatically based on that The ACA units system has a setting for paper note height. The model note height should be the paper size times the reduction factor: 1:1 is 1, 3"=1' is 4, 1-1/2"=1' is 8 and so forth. If not using annotative fonts, you can set up note heights for multiple scales. ACA has historically used width factors in all of their fonts to compress text into smaller space but printing searchable text in the past has required that width factors be eliminated. I prefer a note size of 3/32" high plotted but others use 1/8" high. Other sizes are scaled automatically based on wrote: The Romans.shx font is a very readable font on the screen and on prints. With recent versions of AutoCAD, both SHX fonts and TTF fonts can result in searchable text.
Arch chinese fonts pdf#
I use Arial font now because for years, only TTF fonts could create searchable pdf plots. Others are willing to sacrifice the hand crafted look for more consistent and readable text.
Arch chinese fonts how to#
If you have any idea how to fix this, or at least lead me to the solution, I would really appreciate it. Fontconfig is doing its job well, it's just me who don't know how to configure it.
Arch chinese fonts software#
Of course, it's very often that the software isn't wrong-I'm wrong. I tried editing fontconfig files, mainly /etc/fonts/conf.d/nf, adding "メイリオ" (Meiryo) to the list before MS Gothic is listed (thinking it'd prioritize Meiryo that way) in the sans-serif section, and also did the same for the other sections like serif and monospace. However, after I installed Microsoft fonts, Manjaro now fallbacks Japanese text to MS Gothic, which is the worst font made ever-it doesn't antialias at all, it's so ugly. I heavily use Japanese text, and when I didn't have the Microsoft fonts, it fallbacks to either Noto or Droid Sans, which is cool, since it's a great font and all. However, after adding the Microsoft fonts, I noticed that Manjaro now fallbacks to the (wrong) Microsoft fonts.
Arch chinese fonts install#
I wanted to install Steam so reading the Arch wiki, it said that I better install the Microsoft fonts since Steam relies heavily on them, which wasn't a problem, since I have a Windows 10 install DVD so it was only a matter of extracting the fonts from the CD and it went well.