Next: Windows Misc, Previous: Windows Printing, Up: Microsoft Windows
Starting with Emacs 23, fonts are specified by their name, size and optional properties. The format for specifying fonts comes from the fontconfig library used in modern Free desktops:
[Family[-PointSize]][:Option1=Value1[:Option2=Value2[...]]]
The old XLFD based format is also supported for backwards compatibility.
Emacs 23 and later supports a number of font backends. Currently,
the gdi and uniscribe backends are supported on Windows.
The gdi font backend is available on all versions of Windows,
and supports all fonts that are natively supported by Windows. The
uniscribe font backend is available on Windows 2000 and later,
and supports TrueType and OpenType fonts. Some languages requiring
complex layout can only be properly supported by the Uniscribe
backend. By default, both backends are enabled if supported, with
uniscribe taking priority over gdi. To override that
and use the GDI backend even if Uniscribe is available, invoke Emacs
with the -xrm Emacs.fontBackend:gdi command-line argument, or
add a Emacs.fontBackend resource with the value gdi in
the Registry under either the
‘HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\GNU\Emacs’ or the
‘HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\GNU\Emacs’ key (see Resources).
Optional properties common to all font backends on MS-Windows are:
weightlight,
medium, demibold, bold, and black can be specified
without weight= (e.g., Courier New-12:bold). Otherwise,
the weight should be a numeric value between 100 and 900, or one of the
named weights in font-weight-table. If unspecified, a regular font
is assumed.
slantroman, italic and oblique can be specified
without slant= (e.g., Courier New-12:italic).
Otherwise, the slant should be a numeric value, or one of the named
slants in font-slant-table. On Windows, any slant above 150 is
treated as italics, and anything below as roman.
familypixelsizeadstylemono, sans, serif,
script and decorative are recognized. These are most useful
as a fallback with the font family left unspecified.
registryw32-charset-info-alist here.
spacingp spacing specifies
a proportional font, and m or c specify a monospaced font.
foundryraster for bitmapped fonts, outline for scalable fonts,
or unknown if the type cannot be determined as one of those.
Options specific to GDI fonts:
scriptThe following scripts are recognized on Windows: latin, greek,
coptic, cyrillic, armenian, hebrew, arabic,
syriac, nko, thaana, devanagari, bengali,
gurmukhi, gujarati, oriya, tamil, telugu,
kannada, malayam, sinhala, thai, lao,
tibetan, myanmar, georgian, hangul,
ethiopic, cherokee, canadian-aboriginal, ogham,
runic, khmer, mongolian, symbol, braille,
han, ideographic-description, cjk-misc, kana,
bopomofo, kanbun, yi, byzantine-musical-symbol,
musical-symbol, and mathematical.
antialiasnone means no
antialiasing, standard means use standard antialiasing,
subpixel means use subpixel antialiasing (known as Cleartype on
Windows), and natural means use subpixel antialiasing with
adjusted spacing between letters. If unspecified, the font will use
the system default antialiasing.