On Friday 07 November 2003 10:09 am, Allen Winter wrote: > On Thursday 06 November 2003 08:43 pm, Mark Bucciarelli wrote: > > On Thursday 06 November 2003 4:47 pm, Allen Winter wrote: > > > Hello Everyone: > > > > > > I just started running the CVS version (built myself) and the first > > > thing I noticed is that all my fonts are gone and the fonts being used > > > are rather small and ugly. Should I have started with a clean .kde > > > subdir or something? This is on RH9. > > > > > > I must be doing something wrong... any ideas? > > > > Perhaps QT didn't find Xft2. Run qt-copy's configure with the -verbose > > option. You should see something like this: > > > > Xft auto-detection... () > > Found libXft2.so in /usr/lib > > Found X11/Xft/Xft.h in /usr/X11R6/include > > Found X11/Xft/Xft.h in /usr/include > > Found Xft version 2.0 > > Found freetype2/freetype/freetype.h in /usr/include > > Found fontconfig/fontconfig.h in /usr/X11R6/include > > Xft enabled. > > > > On RedHat 8, I had to create a symbolic link (can't remember where) to > > get qt-copy to see Xft properly. > > > > I'm looking forward to moving back to Debian, and being able to apt-get > > cvs debs. :) > > Thanks for the response Mark. > I haven't checked the Xft issue yet, but I have found that by removing all > the kde cache stuff in /tmp, and starting with a fresh ~/.kde, I at least > get the pretty default fonts. I guess I'll start from scratch... which is > probably the best thing to do anyhow. > More info on this: + I verified that my Qt build found Xft just as Mark shows above. + I found a file called .fonts.cache-1 in my home dir that seem to cause the problem. .fonts.cache-1 looks like is re-created each time I start X/KDE. Anyone know what this file is all about? Any why it is causing me problems in KDE? -Allen >> Visit http://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-devel#unsub to unsubscribe <<