Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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Unsorted entries in PLIST files have generated a pkglint warning for at
least 12 years. Somewhat more recently, pkglint has learned to sort
PLIST files automatically. Since pkglint 5.4.23, the sorting is only
done in obvious, simple cases. These have been applied by running:
pkglint -Cnone,PLIST -Wnone,plist-sort -r -F
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Problems found locating distfiles:
Package acroread7-chsfont: missing distfile acrobat7-fonts/chsfont.tar.gz
Package acroread7-font-share: missing distfile acrobat7-fonts/korfont.tar.gz
Package acroread7-korfont: missing distfile acrobat7-fonts/korfont.tar.gz
Package acroread9-chtfont: missing distfile acrobat9-fonts/FontPack910_cht_i486-linux.tar.bz2
Package acroread9-jpnfont: missing distfile acrobat9-fonts/FontPack910_jpn_i486-linux.tar.bz2
Package cyberbase-ttf: missing distfile cyberbit-ttf/Cyberbase.ZIP
Package cyberbit-ttf: missing distfile cyberbit-ttf/Cyberbit.ZIP
Package pixel-sagas-startrek: missing distfile PS_Font_Fontana.zip
Package pixel-sagas-startrek: missing distfile PS_Font_Montalban.zip
Package pixel-sagas-startrek: missing distfile PS_Font_Probert.zip
Package pixel-sagas-startrek: missing distfile PS_Font_Sternbach.zip
Package pixel-sagas-startrek: missing distfile PS_Font_Trek_Arrowcaps.zip
Package umefont-ttf: missing distfile umefont_560.tar.xz
Otherwise, existing SHA1 digests verified and found to be the same on
the machine holding the existing distfiles (morden). All existing
SHA1 digests retained for now as an audit trail.
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As discussed on tech-pkg.
Bump PKGREVISION.
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EB Garamond 0.016 (2014-04-07)
===============================
* License
- No reserved font name any more
* New Features:
- [12-It] fina for e.fina (more shall come)
- [12-It] ss07: h and k with alternate accent placement above the stem
- [12-Re] Smallcaps now don’t enable ss20 any longer
- OS/2 Optical Size settings
- Change the naming scheme for the small-caps-fonts: they now relate to the preferred family “EB Garamond SC”, hence they are named “EBGaramondSCXX-Style” where XX is the design size and Style is Regular (Italic, Bold, … once they exist).
* New and redrawn Glyphs:
- [08-Re] Half-ring modifiers
- [12-Re] Redraw esh (with Siva Kalyan)
- [12-Re] Regional identifiers 1F1E6 — 1F1FF (Tim Larson)
- [12-Re] Arrows and mathematical symbols (Tim Larson): arrowdbldown, arrowdblleft, arrowdblright, arrowdblup, gradient, product, uni210E, uni214B, uni219E — uni21A2, uni21DA — uni21DD, uni2210, uni2B45, uni2B46, uniFFFD
- [12-Re] e less round
- [12-Re] exclam more delicate
- [12-Re] Missing glyphs in Latin Extended C and D (Capillatus)
- [12-Re] uni1DC4 (more shall come)
- [12-Re] find a latin chi
- [12-Re] ditto mark
- [12-It] Fully redraw the small-caps
- [12-It] Redraw the Euro
- [12-It] Redraw the asterisk
* Fixes:
- Caron and alternate caron position on l.sc, dcaron.sc and tcaron.sc
- Lots of kerning and spacing
- Lots of anchors freshly positioned
- Fix f-ligatures for German locale
- c2sc + German umlauts
- extended IPA small-caps are petite-caps now
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More fonts!
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Garamont's fonts have set a milestone, on which font designers have
been recurring ever since. EB Garamond is an open source project
to create a revival of Claude Garamont's famous humanist typeface
from the mid-16th century. Its design reproduces the original design
by Claude Garamont: The source for the letterforms is a scan of a
specimen known as the "Berner specimen", which, composed in 1592
by Conrad Berner, son-in-law of Christian Egenolff and his successor
at the Egenolff print office, shows Garamont's roman and Granjon
italic fonts at different sizes. Hence the name of this project:
Egenolff-Berner Garamond.
The Garamonds are probably the most copied typefaces in the world.
There are indeed lots of excellent Garamond fonts, also such that
try to approach the original in the same way as EB Garamond does.
In the world of free software, however, only few Garamond-inspired
fonts exist, and as far as I know, none with the scope of EB
Garamond. I know that competition is hard in this field, and these
fonts won't be able to stand up to their commercial counterparts
for quite some time. Nevertheless, it's time for the opensource
community to have a classical Garamond and I promise, I'll try hard
to learn and give my best.
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