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This question might be related to this question: Where does QT go to look for fonts?

Im working with Ubuntu 14.04 and Qt for Embedded 4.8 and want to change the font of my application globally but I can only use a very small subset from my installed fonts.

The style of my application is loaded from a CSS file where I write:

QWidget {
   font-family: "DejaVu Sans"; /*or any other font*/
}

The problem is that Qt doesn't seem to be able to locate my installed fonts. According to the documentation Deploying Qt for Embedded Linux Applications Qt applications look for fonts in the lib/fonts/ directory and specifically for the a file called fontdir. I don't know what this file is about and I cannot find it either. My full path for the fonts (for the debug build) is: /usr/local/Trolltech/QtEmbedded-4.8.6-x86-dbg/lib/fonts

I use the QFontDatabase that can be found in the Qt 4.8 docu to print all my available fonts. Unfortunately the output is:

DejaVu Sans: Normal (11)
fixed: Normal (7 12)
helvetica: Normal (8 10 12 14 18 24) Italic (8 10 12 14 18 24) Bold (8 10 12 14 18 24) Bold Italic (8 10 12 14 18 24)
japanese: Normal (23)
micro: Normal (4)
unifont: Normal (16)

But I have way more fonts installed. The DejaVu Sans, for example exists in bold and other types too but only the "Normal" one is found. Here is only a small subset of fonts located in my fonts folder (those are located in the Qt folder for release and debug as well):

couri.pfa
cour.pfa
cursor.pfa
dejavu_sans_11_50.qpf2
DejaVuSans-BoldOblique.ttf
DejaVuSans-Bold.ttf
DejaVuSansMono-BoldOblique.ttf
DejaVuSansMono-Bold.ttf
DejaVuSansMono-Oblique.ttf
DejaVuSansMono.ttf
DejaVuSans-Oblique.ttf
DejaVuSans.ttf
DejaVuSerif-BoldOblique.ttf
VeraMono.ttf
VeraSeBd.ttf
VeraSe.ttf
Vera.ttf
  1. What is the fontdir file for, do I need it and how do I create it?

  2. What do I have to do so that Qt finds all my installed fonts?

  3. Is there a way to simply use a copy of my font of interest and put it into a sub-directory of my application to treat it like an icon so that I don't have to mess around with all the system locations?

Edit: According to this thread I think that I have also no support for TTF fonts. I had a look into my fonts and it appears that all *.qpf and *.qpf2 fonts are found. So I will try to convert my TTFs into QPFs.

1 Answer 1

1

What is the fontdir file for, do I need it and how do I create it?

This file is only required when QPF fonts should be used which is a Qt specific "light-weight" format. The Qt tool makeqpf uses the file (as far as I understood that).

What do I have to do so that Qt finds all my installed fonts?

If Qt is compiled with -no-freetype then no TTF fonts can be used and are therefore not found by QFontDatabase. To enable the TTF support one has to compile Qt without this compile config flag. I have re-compiled it and all fonts inside /usr/local/Trolltech/QtEmbedded-4.8.6-x86-dbg/lib/fonts were found.

Is there a way to simply use a copy of my font of interest and put it into a sub-directory of my application to treat it like an icon so that I don't have to mess around with all the system locations?

Yes. One can simply use QFontDatabase::addApplicationFont which should not fail for supported font formats.

Note that I decided to re-compile Qt because I didn't want to mess with the makeqpf tool from Qt which could be used to convert TTF fonts to the QPF format.

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