Home

Contact Us

General

Initiative B@bel

WSI Guidelines

Encoding

Principles

Unicode

Training

Tutorials

PUA

Conversion

Resources

Utilities

TECkit

Maps

Resources

Input

Principles

Utilities

Tutorials

Resources

Type Design

Principles

Design Tools

Formats

Resources

Font Downloads

Gentium

Doulos

IPA

Rendering

Principles

Technologies

OpenType

Graphite

Resources

Font FAQ

Links

Glossary


NRSI: Computers & Writing Systems

SIL HOME | CONTACT US

You are here: Rendering > Resources > Font FAQ
Short URL: http://scripts.sil.org/FontFAQ_OtherOS

Using SIL fonts in other Operating Systems (non-Windows) – FAQ

30959 reads

Questions on this page

    Q: Can SIL fonts be used with Mac OS X?
    Q: How do I install SIL fonts in Mac OS X?
    Q: Can I use SIL fonts in Linux?
    Q: My documents with SIL IPA93 fonts are no longer visible in Word 2004. What can I do to make them visible?

Question: Can SIL fonts be used with Mac OS X?

Answer: SIL’s Macintosh TrueType fonts should work fine on Mac OS X, as they are traditional Macintosh fonts. Some of the special features, such as WorldScript support, would be available only in Classic apps that support them. Unfortunately, the SILKey keyboards will work only in Classic apps as well.

SIL’s Unicode fonts are usable on the Mac, but only to the extent the application allows. SIL’s  Unicode fonts are not fully functional on a Mac, because they rely on OpenType features to handle such things as diacritic placement, and OS X does not support OpenType features. It is up to the application to support OpenType, and very few Mac applications do so at this time. The few applications that do support OpenType provide varying levels of OpenType support.

Users of Microsoft Word for Macintosh should note that versions of MacWord prior to Word 2004 do not support Unicode. Furthermore, although Word 2004 supports Unicode, the "smart rendering" technologies required to correctly render SIL's Unicode fonts have not been implemented in Word 2004.

More information about using Unicode fonts on the Mac is available at:

Question: How do I install SIL fonts in Mac OS X?

Answer: In order to install fonts in Mac OS X, you will need to be sure you have both read and write access to the Fonts folder located in the Library folder. Open the Library folder and select the Fonts folder. In the Finder, click on Get Info, then on Ownership & Permissions. In the palette that opens, check to be sure that Access is set to Read and Write. (If the pop-up menus are grayed out, click the padlock icon to unlock the pop-up menus.)

In OS X, fonts may be placed in four different places: (a) the Library:Fonts folder in the Home directory of a user account; (b) the Library:Fonts folder; (c) the Library:Fonts folder in the Mac OS X System folder; and (d) the Fonts folder in the OS 9.2 ("Classic") System folder.

Fonts in (a) are usable only to the user of that account. Fonts in (b) are available to all users. Fonts in (c) are also available to all users, but are essential for system use. Fonts in (d) are used by Classic applications, as well as by applications running in OS X.

In all cases, the fonts must all be "loose" in the System:Fonts folder or Library:Fonts folder — not grouped in family folders — or the system cannot see them.

For installation instructions for the SIL IPA93 fonts, click here.

To install other SIL fonts in Mac OS X:

  • Save the download file to a temporary location on your hard disk.
  • Double-click the download file. A folder with the same name as the download file will be created in the same location as the download file.
  • Open up this folder, and find the font files.
  • Copy the font files to the Fonts folder in the Library folder on your hard drive. You may also want to copy them to the Fonts folder in your OS 9 System folder.

Question: Can I use SIL fonts in Linux?

Answer: SIL offers freeware and SIL Open Font License (OFL) fonts in TrueType and PostScript Type 1. All fonts available are posted on our website.

Since it is possible to use both TrueType and PostScript Type 1 fonts in Linux, it should be possible to use SIL’s fonts in Linux. Most of our Unicode fonts now have a Debian distribution package. Our legacy (custom-encoded) font packages do not have debian packages and have not been tested on Linux.

Due to our limited staff, we must restrict our support to only SIL font products running in Windows and Macintosh systems. However, the Gentium font source page includes some helpful instructions explaining how to install .TTF files on Linux when these are not supplied as a Debian package or RPM.

Question: My documents with SIL IPA93 fonts are no longer visible in Word 2004. What can I do to make them visible?

Answer: We are grateful to David Kamholz for the following information:

The characters were encoded in the ordinary 8-bit ASCII ranges and, there is no way to view them properly in Word 2004 in that encoding. I’ve written the following macro, which does a character by character search and replace to fix the characters. It finds only  characters in the font specified. I also noticed that for some reason  tabs and newlines in the SIL font were a problem, and could not be  converted to the new encoding, nor left alone, because they displayed as rectangles that way (although the tab and newline formatting still worked). So I changed these to another font — Times New Roman in this case, but you can just edit the string in the macro.

Instructions for creating and running this macro:

  • Download this text file, open it in a text editor, copy the text to your clipboard.
  • Open your document in Word 2004
  • Choose Tools / Macro / Visual Basic Editor
  • In the VB Editor: Choose View / Code  or press  F7  to view the code editor
  • Paste the macro text in.
  • Choose View / Microsoft Word or click in your document window to dismiss the VB editor.
  • Choose Tools / Macro / Macros....
  • Select the SILConvert macro and click Run.
Word 2004 Macro
Lorna A. Priest, 2005-10-27
Download "Word2004Macro.txt", Text document, 2KB [1703 downloads]

Note

This fix is likely to be helpful for any of our legacy symbol fonts (e.g. SIL Galatia, SIL Hebrew), not just IPA93.

Users should consider moving to Unicode rather than maintaining legacy data.


Backlinks (20 most popular; affiliated sites and popular search engines removed)



Add a response to this article

Note: the opinions expressed in submitted contributions below do not necessarily reflect the opinions of our website.

 Reply
"N. Brunberg", Thu, Sep 29, 2005 08:44 (CDT)

Mac OS X OpenType support

Mac OS X has native support for OpenType since 2001, please refer to the following link in the Apple support database: http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=25251

 Reply
"Noriko Sakai", Mon, Apr 14, 2008 04:39 (CDT)

installment of fonts

Mine is Mac OS  X Version 10.4.11

How to download SIl. Encore IPA93 fonts

Thank you.

 Reply
jonathan, Tue, Apr 15, 2008 02:48 (CDT)

Re: installment of fonts

See the IPA93 page, and look for the Download link. You may need a utility such as StuffIt Expander to decode the archives.

Note that the IPA93 fonts are obsolete and unsupported, and you are strongly encouraged to use Unicode-compliant fonts and software instead.

Add a response to this article



© 2003-2009 SIL International, all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted elsewhere on this page.
Provided by SIL's Non-Roman Script Initiative. Contact us at nrsi@sil.org.