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You can assign aliases to fonts so you can specify them without having to type their complete font names. This is particularly useful if you tend to set a font often.
If you are creating aliases for fonts that exist within
the /usr/lib/X11/fonts subdirectories, you must
be logged into the system as root.
You should
also ensure that /usr/bin/X11 has been added
to root's $PATH environment variable.
To create a font alias, perform the following steps.
In most cases, fonts are located in /usr/lib/X11/fonts in one of the following subdirectories: 75dpi, 100dpi, misc, Speedo, or Type1. The first three of these directories contain a fonts.alias file by default. You must be logged in as root to edit any of these files.
When you add an alias to a fonts.alias file, you must enter the alias, the name by which you want to refer to the font, in the first column, and the fontname, the font's full name, in the second column.
An easy way to include a font's full name in the fonts.alias file is to open two scoterm windows, one in which you are editing the fonts.alias file and one in which you open the fonts.dir file that contains the full name of the desired font. Use scoterm's cut and paste functionality to copy the full font name from the fonts.dir file to the fonts.alias file. This approach reduces the possibility of making a typographical error in typing the font's full name.
If you make an
error entering a font's full name in the fonts.alias
file, the alias will not work when specified.
A typical fonts.alias file in /usr/lib/X11/fonts/75dpi might contain these two aliases:
courier10 -adobe-courier-bold-o-normal--10-100-75-75-m-60-iso8859-1 courier12 -adobe-courier-bold-o-normal--12-120-75-75-m-60-iso8859-1
You can specify any number of aliases in fonts.alias files.
If you created a font alias during a Graphical Environment session,
you must tell the X server to reread the font database so
it recognizes your new alias. To reset the font database,
enter the following command from a scoterm window:
xset fp rehash
You must reset the font database whenever you edit a fonts.alias file while running a Graphical Environment session.
If you created a font alias from the operating system command
line (and your SCO OpenServer system was not running), there is no
need to update the X server.
The changes that you made to fonts.alias are
incorporated automatically the next time you start your system.