On 12/04/13 18:19, Patrick Dupre wrote:
>> In looking at the document's properties and selecting the
"fonts" tab I noticed that it was using
/usr/share/fonts/google-croscore/SymbolNeu.ttf for symbols on my F19 system. This comes
with the google-croscore-symbolneu-fonts package. Erasing this package resulted in a
"delta" being displayed as /usr/share/fonts/default/Type1/s050000l.pfb is now
being used.
In my case, I use for symbol:
/usr/sahre/fonts/wine-symbol-fonts/symbol.ttf
In my opinion, this is the faultry font.
I dug a bit,
In the symbol font, the Delta character is U+0394, while the increment character
is U+2206 (looks very simiar to a Delta), and it is just beside the empty set
character U+2205, the one which is probably displayed (like a Phi).
So, there is a mess up here.
Since I don't have wine installed on my system, I don't have
/usr/share/fonts/wine-symbol-fonts/symbol.ttf .
The fact that it fails with the google-croscore-symbolneu-fonts package as well would
indicate that it isn't a font file issue. In fact, if you use something such as the
Gnome Character Map you'd see that the character displays properly in that app no
matter which font you select.
Additionally, the character in your test.pdf is U+2206.
I copied it and pasted it to terminal in the following manner....
[egreshko@meimei ~]$ echo ∆ | od -bc
0000000 342 210 206 012
342 210 206 \n
While the Delta character is U+0394 produces...
[egreshko@meimei F20-TC4]$ echo Δ | od -bc
0000000 316 224 012
316 224 \n
For completeness......
[egreshko@meimei ~]$ echo ∅ | od -bc
0000000 342 210 205 012
342 210 205 \n
Pretty sure this is an evince issue....
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1037882
--
Getting tired of non-Fedora discussions and self-serving posts