![]() ![]() If it's missing in there too, it'll try Arial Unicode. If a given character is missing, it'll try Sazanami. Meaning in my case it'll first try the DejaVu font. Think of serif, sans-serif and monospace as virtual fonts picking them in Firefox or any other program will make it go through that priority order in nf. The primary font is DejaVu Serif for serif, DejaVu Sans for sans-serif and DejaVu Mono for monospace. Full hinting, antialiasing enabled, subpixel rendering: rgb, bitmap fonts disabled. ![]() Send me a PM with contact information if you want me to, uh, smurf you that Arial Unicode. I'm going to try it with that Arial Unicode font later.Įdit: Setting Arial Unicode as the standard font in Firefox made it work on all non-Japanese-encoded pages, so you could try something similar with Sazanami or similar. Move the MS ゴシック font farther down and move up another unicode font if you want it to become the kanji standard. Of course, the kanji font did that was the whole purpose of it. nf file and put my preferred font (DejaVu Sans) up top, so no fonts changed for me. It works for me now, even in other programs. It's really frustrating to me, as i look at jp sites quite often. It seems I'm just going to have to live with it. ![]() It works, but it changes all the other fonts, making them look worse in my opinion. ![]()
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