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 Sans set of Traditional Chinese fonts which supports BIG5.
Traditional Chinese glyphs comply with the glyph standard of the Taiwan Ministry
of Education.
This is the FreeBSD Ports Collection. For an easy to use
WEB-based interface to it, please see:
https://www.FreeBSD.org/ports
For general information on the Ports Collection, please see the
FreeBSD Handbook ports section which is available from:
https://docs.freebsd.org/en/books/handbook/ports/
for the latest official version
or:
The ports(7) manual page (man ports).
These will explain how to use ports and packages.
If you would like to search for a port, you can do so easily by
saying (in /usr/ports):
make search name="<name>"
or:
make search key="<keyword>"
which will generate a list of all ports matching <name> or <keyword>.
make search also supports wildcards, such as:
make search name="gtk*"
For information about contributing to FreeBSD ports, please see the Porter's
Handbook, available at:
https://docs.freebsd.org/en/books/porters-handbook/
NOTE: This tree will GROW significantly in size during normal usage!
The distribution tar files can and do accumulate in /usr/ports/distfiles,
and the individual ports will also use up lots of space in their work
subdirectories unless you remember to "make clean" after you're done
building a given port. /usr/ports/distfiles can also be periodically
cleaned without ill-effect.