Instead of putting the XML code in /etc/fonts/conf.d/50-user.conf (which actually just includes files from $HOME/.config/fontconfig/conf.d or $HOME/.config/fontconfig/fonts.conf) put the XML code in a file under the two mentioned directories in your $HOME/.config/fontconfig/ directory. Don't mess with the system configuration files as this will make system upgrades more complicated.
I solved this for my system by removing the Calibri font, installing Carlito, which is "metric-compatible with Calibri" and is packaged with "a mapping entry to fontconfig (local.conf)," refreshing my font cache, and restarting LibreOffice:
I ran into this issue on Ubuntu LTS 18.04, and then again after upgrading to 20.04 LTS. Calibri looked horrible on LibreOffice and Firefox. The above method worked for me as follows:
Create the file described above and save as fonts.conf in $HOME/.config/fontconfig
Then rebuild the font cache: sudo fc-cache -fv
I'm not sure if the last step was necessary, but I did it anyway before checking the font rendering.
Calibri now looks perfect on LibreOffice and in Firefox.
Fonts like Calibri and Cambria resort to using embedded bitmaps when adjusted to small sizes.
To disable this font behaviour, put the following into
$HOME/.fonts.conf
:Create the file if it doesn't exist.
Restart to take effect.
Sources
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=724818 (registration required)
http://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/precise/man5/fonts-conf.5.html
NOTE:
$HOME/.fonts.conf
is deprecated in Ubuntu 12.10 Instead, paste the above XML code (as root) in /etc/fonts/conf.d/50-user.confInstead of putting the XML code in
/etc/fonts/conf.d/50-user.conf
(which actually just includes files from$HOME/.config/fontconfig/conf.d
or$HOME/.config/fontconfig/fonts.conf
) put the XML code in a file under the two mentioned directories in your$HOME/.config/fontconfig/
directory. Don't mess with the system configuration files as this will make system upgrades more complicated.I solved this for my system by removing the Calibri font, installing Carlito, which is "metric-compatible with Calibri" and is packaged with "a mapping entry to fontconfig (local.conf)," refreshing my font cache, and restarting LibreOffice:
Here's a before and after with Microsoft at the top and Carlito below:
You can do the same with Caladea for Cambria with
fonts-crosextra-caladea
and you can use Croscore fonts Arimo, Tinos, and Cousine for Arial, Times New Roman, and Courier New withfonts-croscore
.See my full post for more details.
I ran into this issue on Ubuntu LTS 18.04, and then again after upgrading to 20.04 LTS. Calibri looked horrible on LibreOffice and Firefox. The above method worked for me as follows:
Create the file described above and save as fonts.conf in $HOME/.config/fontconfig
Then rebuild the font cache: sudo fc-cache -fv
I'm not sure if the last step was necessary, but I did it anyway before checking the font rendering.
Calibri now looks perfect on LibreOffice and in Firefox.