Mail Archives: geda-user/2015/11/27/13:24:49
Erich Heinzle wrote:
> I have already converted the hershey greek and cyrillic fonts, and would
> be able to support them most easily this way, plus, I could add support
> for subscript and superscript while I'm at it, as well as accents,
This would sure be applauded by non-English geda users. (I assume, äüöß
are included in "accents" :-) But even English speaking users may like to
print an occasional µF on their silk.
> Also on the to do list is a PCB compatible version of osifont, a free
> cad font, but hershey sans stroke looks pretty nice as a default font
> replacement in pcb so I've not been too motivated to get onto it.
From a license point of view, osifont seems the better choice as it is a
clean "GNU GPL licence version 3 with GPL font exception".
With hershey the license is a bit non-standard. The license requires a
redistributor of the font to explicitly acknowledge its origin. The
license allows the user to convert the font data to any format except for
the format used by NTIS:
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing:HersheyFontLicense?rd=Licensing/HersheyFontLicense
The second requirement already makes the font non-free in the Debian
world. Since pcb format includes the whole font as a set of glyphs, each
and every *.pcb file may be regarded as font redistribution. Strictly
speaking, a plain drop-in replacement of the default font with Hershey may
be interpreted as a license violation.
Consequently, fedora does not mark the font as free in the FSF sense:
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing:Fonts
I for one would welcome osifont as an option in the default install of
pcb.
---<)kaimartin(>---
--
Kai-Martin Knaak tel: +49-511-762-2895
Universität Hannover, Inst. für Quantenoptik fax: +49-511-762-2211
Welfengarten 1, 30167 Hannover http://www.iqo.uni-hannover.de
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