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Date:      Sun, 24 Apr 2005 00:27:24 +0200
From:      Danny Pansters <danny@ricin.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: subbfont.ttf, missing.
Message-ID:  <200504240027.24611.danny@ricin.com>
In-Reply-To: <20050423220816.GA99173@thought.org>
References:  <20050422201203.GA90690@thought.org> <20050423173958.3d84f6b4@ale.varnet.bsd> <20050423220816.GA99173@thought.org>

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On Sunday 24 April 2005 00:08, Gary Kline wrote:
> On Sat, Apr 23, 2005 at 05:39:58PM -0300, Alejandro Pulver wrote:
> > On Sat, 23 Apr 2005 13:19:14 -0700
> >
> > Gary Kline <kline@tao.thought.org> wrote:
> > > On Sat, Apr 23, 2005 at 04:44:33PM -0300, Alejandro Pulver wrote:
> > > > On Fri, 22 Apr 2005 13:12:03 -0700
> > > > Gary Kline <kline@tao.thought.org> wrote:
> >
> > Hello,
> >
> > The first time I installed mplayer and it prompted me for that file I
> > symlinked it to a font (you can do that instead of copying it),
> > but I was not sure about if that works (I never played a movie with
> > subtitles).
>
> 	Interesting.  I've installed, de- and re-installed mplayer
> 	several times.  Noprompting.  Anyway, I cp'd over a generic
> 	ttf file and the error dialog went away.


Read /usr/ports/multimedia/mplayer/pkg-message

For non TTF fonts you can go into the ports dir as a normal user and:

% make install-user

It makes warnings about "no font found" or alike in gmplayer go away. 

If you want to use a TTF font, I guess you have to install one. Perhaps use 
mkttfdir or what's it called...

I never used OSD myself I must say, and usually use kmplayer.

HTH,

Dan 



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