![]() I may go back to this file to change the font-family from system to something else, but for now I’m happy knowing where I can go to change this if need be. ![]() So secondly, I changed the default font size in the defaultStyles.xml file from 13 to 12 where applicable and this took care of the cut of characters problem. Suspect using a TrueType font as system font may slow down your system or have other side-effect which I don’t care to explore at this stage. Of course one can change the system font to some other font family (like Arial if you have the MS Fonts installed and you will be sending your mindmaps to windows users as well), but I Fail to change the duration by dragging the task bar in Gantt View. Part of task text was cut off in Gantt View. When copy a link onto a topic in XMind, after export to PDF document, the link was failed to be opened. But the default is set to “13”, which results in the last 1 or 2 characters begin cut of in the topic | subtopic box. On Windows (Portable version) and Ubuntu, the splash image won't disappear after XMind was successfully launched. However, selecting the fonts dialog in Xmind only gives the option of size “12” or “14”, not “13”. Lo and behold, the default application font-family is “Sans” and the default size “10”. This led me to check the system font under System | Preferences | Appearance | Fonts. sudo vim /usr/local/xmind/įirstly: The default font is each element specified is fo:font-family="$system$" Since this is in a location outside of your home directory, you need to use sudo to edit the file, ie. Use your favourite editor (I use vim, but gedit would work just as well) to edit the file. On my home computer running Ubuntu 10.04 Lucid Lynx, it’s at /usr/local/xmind/plugins/.resources_3.04291819/styles/defaultStyles.xml. I found the file defaultStyles.xml by simply issuing the command locate defaultStyles.xml Most (if not all) of these machines are running Ubuntu. Today I got fed-up and decided to do something about it. Feel free to drop your questions, suggestions or a simple “thank you” in the comment section.I have noticed that on all the machines that I have used XMind, the default font appears to be a poor choice. It is interesting how seemingly small stuff like installing zlib could become a pain for two reasons: a different package name and the package name containing a “hidden” numeral one (1) which is confused with a lowercase L. For example, if you need the latest or a specific version of zlib which is not available in the distribution’s repository. However, I won’t recommend going the source code way just for installing zlib unless you have a good reason to do so. You may also download the source code of Zlib from its website and install it. ![]() Only install it if you require it otherwise you should be good with the main runtime zlib1g package. The other package, zlib1g-dev is development package. Many people make this mistake while typing the command. Please keep in mind that the the letter before g is 1 (one), not lowercase L. Open a terminal and use the following command: sudo apt install zlib1g Install Zlib on Ubuntu-based Linux distributions ![]() When you have that information, installing them is just one apt command away. If you use the apt search command, you’ll find that the there are a couple of packages that let you install zlib: zlib1g and zlib1g-dev. Why do you see this unable to locate package error? Because there is no package named zlib. If you try installing Zlib on Ubuntu, it will throw “unable to locate package zlib” error. Zlib is an open source library for used for data compression.Īs an end user, you are likely to encounter the need of installing Zlib (or zlib devel package) as a dependency of another application.īut here comes the problem.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |