It's better to require packages instead of files here.
Also, this allows us to remove the local variable
which is no longer used (FONTDIR).
Reported by: mat
Reviewed by: bapt
Approved by: x11 (bapt)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D27053
Also, remove bugus CONFLICTS.
I believe that the FONTDIR could be renamed to _FONTDIR and the RUN_DEPENDS
sorted, but let's do it another time to keep the diff small. Also,
prefixing non-standard variables with "_" is not officially documented yet
in the Porter's Handbook (it's only the convention suggested by portclippy,
which itself is not mentioned there yet).
Reviewed by: zeising (earlier version)
Approved by: portmgr blanket
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26989
People running wayland etc don't want xorg as a hard dependency.
PR: 250329
Submitted by: Lewis Cook <vulcan@wired.sh>
Submitted by: Namkhai B. <namkhai.n3@protonmail.com>
Sponsored by: SkunkWerks, GmbH
Those ports mainly concern old Gnome2 libraries, the behaviour of this infra
is not compatible with the meson build system (being used in newer version)
the documentation is provided otherwise in the other version
Noto Sans CJK and Noto Serif CJK comprehensively cover Simplified Chinese,
Traditional Chinese, Japanese, and Korean in a unified font family. This
includes the full coverage of CJK Ideographs with variation support for 4
regions, Kangxi radicals, Japanese Kana, Korean Hangul, and other CJK symbols
and letters in the Basic Multilingual Plane of Unicode. It also provides limited
coverage of CJK Ideographs in Plane 2 of Unicode as necessary to support
standards from China and Japan.
This port is the set of Hong Kong fonts.
WWW: https://www.google.com/get/noto/
WWW: https://github.com/googlefonts/noto-cjk
When text is rendered by a computer, sometimes characters are displayed as
"tofu". They are little boxes to indicate your device doesn't have a font to
display the text.
Google has been developing a font family called Noto, which aims to support all
languages with a harmonious look and feel. Noto is Google's answer to tofu. The
name noto is to convey the idea that Google's goal is to see no more "tofu".
Noto has multiple styles and weights, and is freely available to all. The
comprehensive set of fonts and tools used in our development is available in our
GitHub repositories.
This port provides the emoji fonts set.
WWW: https://www.google.com/get/noto/
WWW: https://github.com/googlefonts/noto-emoji