diff --git a/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/x11/chapter.sgml b/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/x11/chapter.sgml index 32d3c7e779..29ca0bf165 100644 --- a/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/x11/chapter.sgml +++ b/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/x11/chapter.sgml @@ -723,7 +723,8 @@ EndSection Examples of Xft-aware applications include Qt 2.3 and higher (the toolkit for the KDE desktop), Gtk+ 2.0 and higher (the toolkit for the - GNOME desktop), and Mozilla 1.2 and higher. + GNOME desktop), and + Mozilla 1.2 and higher. In order to control which fonts are anti-aliased, or to @@ -870,12 +871,13 @@ EndSection so the entire KDE environment can use anti-aliased fonts (see on - KDE for details). Gtk+ and GNOME - can also be made to use anti-aliasing via the - Font capplet (see KDE for details). Gtk+ and + GNOME can also be made to use + anti-aliasing via the Font capplet (see for details). By default, - Mozilla 1.2 and greater will automatically use anti-aliasing. - To disable this, rebuild Mozilla with the + Mozilla 1.2 and greater will + automatically use anti-aliasing. To disable this, rebuild + Mozilla with the -DWITHOUT_XFT flag. @@ -1238,7 +1240,7 @@ DisplayManager.requestPort: 0 Starting with version 4.0.2, XFree86 supports anti-aliasing via its RENDER extension. Gtk+ 2.0 and greater (the toolkit used by - GNOME can make use of this + GNOME) can make use of this functionality. Configuring anti-aliasing is described in . So, with up-to-date software, anti-aliasing is possible within the