Description of problem: thai-scalable-waree-fonts is the current default font for Thai in Fedora (or should be) but it is missing a .conf file, so actually it is not used but instead Google Droid Sans Thai is used. Version-Release number of selected component (if applicable): thai-scalable-waree-fonts-0.6.5-3.fc30 How reproducible: 100% Steps to Reproduce: 1. fc-match :lang=th Actual results: DroidSansThai.ttf: "Droid Sans" "Regular" Expected results: Waree.ttf
FEDORA-2019-96efa391f7 has been submitted as an update to Fedora 30. https://bodhi.fedoraproject.org/updates/FEDORA-2019-96efa391f7
thai-scalable-fonts-0.6.5-4.fc30 has been pushed to the Fedora 30 testing repository. If problems still persist, please make note of it in this bug report. See https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/QA:Updates_Testing for instructions on how to install test updates. You can provide feedback for this update here: https://bodhi.fedoraproject.org/updates/FEDORA-2019-96efa391f7
Assigning one typeface to multiple aliases is basically wrong. particularly sans-serif and serif is different one. apparently Waree font looks like sans-serif. we should have different one for serif.
Okay, I updated the build to use Waree for sans-serif and Norasi for serif.
thai-scalable-fonts-0.6.5-5.fc30 has been pushed to the Fedora 30 testing repository. If problems still persist, please make note of it in this bug report. See https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/QA:Updates_Testing for instructions on how to install test updates. You can provide feedback for this update here: https://bodhi.fedoraproject.org/updates/FEDORA-2019-96efa391f7
thai-scalable-fonts-0.6.5-5.fc30 has been pushed to the Fedora 30 stable repository. If problems still persist, please make note of it in this bug report.