But you may prefer not to do this automatically, and would rather
just have the tool installed.
+Template: xfonts-traditional/reconfigure-xterm
+Type: boolean
+Default: false
+_Description: Configure xterm to use traditional font?
+ You can have the xterm default UTF-8 font changed to the traditional
+ version.
+ .
+ If you approve, I will edit /etc/X11/app-default/XTerm for you, and
+ save your old file as XTerm.backup.not-trad. (Note that this is a
+ conffile so you may get prompts from dpkg about it in the future.)
+ .
+ Alternatively, if you do not want me to change the default, I will
+ generate XTerm.trad for you to do what you like with.
+ .
+ To revert the change, simply change the key "*VT100.utf8Fonts.font"
+ back from "-trad-..." to "-misc-...", or rename the old file back
+ into place.
+
Template: xfonts-traditional/remap-fixed
Type: boolean
-Default: true
+Default: false
_Description: Configure system to use traditional "fixed"?
You can have the font alias "fixed" remapped to the traditional version.
.
- If you approve, I will edit /etc/X11/fonts/misc/xfonts-base.alias
- for you, and save your old file as xfonts-base.alias.not-trad. (Note
- that this is a conffile so you may get prompts from dpkg about it in
- the future.) This will also make the xfonts-traditional package
- harder to safely remove.
+ If you approve, I will edit /etc/X11/fonts/misc/xfonts-base.alias for
+ you, and save your old file as xfonts-base.alias.backup.not-trad.
+ (Note that this is a conffile so you may get prompts from dpkg about
+ it in the future.)
.
Alternatively, if you do not want me to change the default, I will
generate xfonts-base-alias.trad for you to do what you like with.
.
- To revert the change to the default, simply change the alias fixed
+ To revert the change to the default, simply change the alias "fixed"
back from "-trad-..." to "-misc-...", or rename the old file back
into place.
+
+Template: xfonts-traditional/confirm-break-remove
+Type: boolean
+Default: false
+_Description: Remove anyway, breaking "fixed" and your X server?
+ Removing xfonts-traditional would break your X server by removing "fixed".
+ .
+ You should not remove xfonts-traditional while "fixed" refers to one
+ of its fonts. You probably want to check the differences between the
+ various /etc/X11/fonts/misc/xfonts-base.alias*, reconcile any changes,
+ and then run "update-fonts-alias misc". After that you can retry the
+ removal.