PRC contains mainland China, Hong Kong, Macao, and Taiwan. (In some
uses "mainland" also contains Hong Kong and Macao, but it depends on
the context).
In mainland China many users want TC and JP fonts alongside SC font
because once you know SC you can just read TC seamlessly, and many
Chinese Linux users (not including me) are Japanese cartoon or game
fans. IMO using the monolithic CJK .ttc font file is easier.
1. mention variable fonts (not generally useful for the desktop)
2. Cantarell is now at google fonts
3. The organization of Noto fonts has changed. Provide an example
for how to download, and working links for the CJK variants (now
just Noto Sans JP etc).
4. Oxygen Sans and Mono now at google fonts, but each is separate.
5. Comment the Noto Sans CJK item, the links are no longer useful
and the fonts have been renamed.
6. Fix the debian UMing link to point to the tarball.
One of the things I've been doing over the past week is building
packages that list &qt5-deps or &qt5-components with Qt Alternate and Qt
Components.
For each one I've been checking logs for relevant information to Qt. It
doesn't show up in my logs, so I checked the Configure script and didn't
notice anything in there either.
When checking the NEWS file, I found out that several backends have been
removed - including cogl, qt, and DirectFB.
Even if polkit is not installed at the build time, this package will
still build the polkit-based backlight control routines. Once polkit is
installed, the backlight control immediately starts to work.
support.
Also add a quick comment regarding testing this package - using
"echo GETPIN | pinentry-qt5" will pop up a dialog where you can enter a
set of numbers that will then be returned to your terminal.
I mentioned KF5 and KWayland since users of LXQt who have GnuPG
installed may want this functionality to work, but I don't have a
problem with removing the mention to KWayland if desired.
In KWayland, the library used is libKF5WaylandClient.so