Last Updated on May 22, 2022
In the days when Linux was a fledgling operating system, font handling was often identified as a major weakness. It was true that Linux then had problems with dealing with TrueType fonts, its font subsystem was prehistoric compared to its competitors, there was a dearth of decent fonts, difficulties in adding and configuring fonts made it almost impossible for beginners to improve matters for themselves, and jagged fonts with no anti-aliasing just added to a rather amateurish looking desktop.
Fortunately, the situation is considerably better these days, with a better quality of user interface typography. With the continuing improving FreeType font engine producing high quality output, natively supporting scalable font formats like TrueType, Linux is making great strides although there’s still some way to go. Dealing with fonts under Linux can sometimes be tricky.
Are you looking for a simple command-line tool that lets you search for fonts and preview them with no fuss and bother? fontpreview might just be the ticket.
Installation
There’s no compiling applicable for this utility, as the program is a bash script. You can clone the repository, and install the bash script to /usr/bin, with the following commands:
$ cd fontpreview
$ sudo make install
There’s a package in the Arch User Repository for Arch-based distros. There’s not a package in Ubuntu’s repositories. I haven’t had the time to check out whether packages are available for other distros.
There’s a few dependencies. You’ll need xdotool (command-line X11 automation tool), fzf (a command-line fuzzy finder), ImageMagick (software suite for displaying, creating, converting, modifying, and editing raster images) and sxiv (a simple image viewer) installed on your system.
Next page: Page 2 – In Operation
Pages in this article:
Page 1 – Introduction / Installation
Page 2 – In Operation
Page 3 – Summary
Complete list of articles in this series:
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fontpreview | Quickly search and preview fonts |
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