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-*-text-*-GNU FreeFontThe GNU FreeFont project aims to provide a useful set of free scalable(i.e., OpenType) fonts covering as much as possible of the ISO 10646/UnicodeUCS (Universal Character Set).Statement of Purpose--------------------The practical reason for putting glyphs together in a single font face isto conveniently mix symbols and characters from different writing systems,without having to switch fonts.Coverage--------FreeFont covers the following character ranges* Latin, Cyrillic, and Arabic, with supplements for many languages* Greek, Hebrew, Armenian, Georgian, Thaana, Syriac* Devanagari, Bengali, Gujarati, Gurmukhi, Sinhala, Tamil, Malayalam* Thai, Tai Le, Kayah Li, Hanunóo, Buginese* Cherokee, Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics* Ethiopian, Tifnagh, Vai, Osmanya, Coptic* Glagolitic, Gothic, Runic, Ugaritic, Old Persian, Phoenician, Old Italic* Braille, International Phonetic Alphabet* currency symbols, general punctuation and diacritical marks, dingbats* mathematical symbols, including much of the TeX repertoire of symbols* technical symbols: APL, OCR, arrows,* geometrical shapes, box drawing* musical symbols, gaming symbols, miscellaneous symbolsetc.For more detail see <http://www.gnu.org/software/freefont/coverage.html>Editing-------The free outline font editor, George Williams' FontForge<http://fontforge.sourceforge.net/> is used for editing the fonts.Design Issues-------------Which font shapes should be made? Historical style terms like Renaissanceor Baroque letterforms cannot be applied beyond Latin/Cyrillic/Greekscripts to any greater extent than Kufi or Nashki can be applied beyondArabic script; "italic" is strictly meaningful only for Latin letters,although many scripts such as Cyrillic have a history with "cursive" andmany others with "oblique" faces.However, most modern writing systems have typographic formulations forcontrasting uniform and modulated character stroke widths, and since theadvent of the typewriter, most have developed a typographic style withuniform-width characters.Accordingly, the FreeFont family has one monospaced - FreeMono - and twoproportional faces (one with uniform stroke - FreeSans - and one withmodulated stroke - FreeSerif).The point of having characters from different writing systems in one fontis that mixed text should look good, and so each FreeFont face containscharacters of similar style and weight.Licensing---------Free UCS scalable fonts is free software; you can redistribute it and/ormodify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as publishedby the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or(at your option) any later version.The fonts are distributed in the hope that they will be useful, butWITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITYor FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public Licensefor more details.You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License alongwith this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.As a special exception, if you create a document which uses this font, andembed this font or unaltered portions of this font into the document, thisfont does not by itself cause the resulting document to be covered by theGNU General Public License. This exception does not however invalidate anyother reasons why the document might be covered by the GNU General PublicLicense. If you modify this font, you may extend this exception to yourversion of the font, but you are not obligated to do so. If you do notwish to do so, delete this exception statement from your version.Files and their suffixes------------------------The files with .sfd (Spline Font Database) are in FontForge's native format.They may be used to modify the fonts.TrueType fonts are the files with the .ttf (TrueType Font) suffix. Theseare ready to use in Linux/Unix, on Apple Mac OS, and on Microsoft Windowssystems.OpenType fonts (with suffix .otf) are preferred for use on Linux/Unix,but *not* for recent Microsoft Windows systems.See the INSTALL file for more information.Web Open Font Format files (with suffix .woff) are for use in Web sites.See the webfont_guidelines.txt for further information.Further information-------------------Home page of GNU FreeFont:http://www.gnu.org/software/freefont/More information is at the main project page of Free UCS scalable fonts:http://savannah.gnu.org/projects/freefont/To report problems with GNU FreeFont, it is best to obtain a Savannahaccount and post reports using that account onhttps://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/Public discussions about GNU FreeFont may be posted to the mailing listfreefont-bugs@gnu.org--------------------------------------------------------------------------Original author: Primoz PeterlinCurrent administrator: Steve White <stevan.white@googlemail.com>$Id: README,v 1.10 2011-06-12 07:14:12 Stevan_White Exp $