Fonts: Difference between revisions

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link to what is meant by fonts.fonts.
imported>Siers
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=== Set multiple fonts for different languages ===
=== Set multiple fonts for different languages ===
If you are not an english native user and want to use another languages alongside english, you may want to set appropriate fonts for each language in your whole os. In nixos, it's so easy. Imagine i'm a persian user and i want to set "Vazir" font to persian texts and "Ubuntu" font for english texts. Just put these lines into your configuration.nix:
If you are not a native English speaker and want to use another languages alongside English, you may want to set appropriate fonts for each language in your whole OS. In NixOS, it's so easy. Imagine I'm a Persian speaker and I want to set "Vazir" font to Persian texts and "Ubuntu" font for English texts. Just put these lines into your configuration.nix:


<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">

Revision as of 08:54, 26 June 2020

Installing fonts on NixOS

NixOS has many font packages available, and you can easily search for your favourites on the NixOS packages site.

Despite looking like normal packages, simply adding these font packages to your environment.systemPackages won't make the fonts accessible to applications. To achieve that, put these packages in the fonts.fonts NixOS options list instead.


For example:

fonts.fonts = with pkgs; [
  noto-fonts
  noto-fonts-cjk
  noto-fonts-emoji
  liberation_ttf
  fira-code
  fira-code-symbols
  mplus-outline-fonts
  dina-font
  proggyfonts
];

Imperative installation of user fonts

This is useful for quick font experiments.

Example: Install SourceCodePro-Regular.

font=$(nix-build --no-out-link '<nixpkgs>' -A source-code-pro)/share/fonts/opentype/SourceCodePro-Regular.otf
cp $font ~/.local/share/fonts
fc-cache
# Verify that the font has been installed
fc-list -v | grep -i source


Set multiple fonts for different languages

If you are not a native English speaker and want to use another languages alongside English, you may want to set appropriate fonts for each language in your whole OS. In NixOS, it's so easy. Imagine I'm a Persian speaker and I want to set "Vazir" font to Persian texts and "Ubuntu" font for English texts. Just put these lines into your configuration.nix:

 #----=[ Fonts ]=----#
fonts = {
  enableDefaultFonts = true;
  fonts = [ 
    pkgs.ubuntu_font_family

    # Persian Fonts
    pkgs.vazir-fonts
  ];

  fontconfig = {
    penultimate.enable = false;
    defaultFonts = {
      serif = [ "Vazir" "Ubuntu" ];
      sansSerif = [ "Vazir" "Ubuntu" ];
      monospace = [ "Ubuntu" ];
    };
  };
};

Troubleshooting

What font names can be used in fonts.fontconfig.defaultFonts.monospace?

Those that fontconfig will understand. This can be queried from a font file using fc-query.

$ cd /nix/var/nix/profiles/system/sw/share/X11-fonts
$ fc-query DejaVuSans.ttf | grep '^\s\+family:' | cut -d'"' -f2

Adding personal fonts to ~/.fonts doesn't work

The ~/.fonts is being deprecated upstream[1]. It already is not working with NixOS.

The new preferred location is in $XDG_DATA_HOME/fonts, which for most users will resolve to ~/.local/share/fonts[2]