-The new Indian implementation uses the ISFOC standard fonts. We use
-CDAC ISFOC fonts to display the Devanagari script in Emacs. They are
-copyrighted, but we received permission to use them in Emacs from the
-font developers. These fonts can be obtained from the internet, or
-may be found in C-DAC products (including downloadable ones). For
-examle, you can search the CDAC Devanagari font `dvsr0ntt.ttf' by
-using some search engines and they will guide you to appropriate URLs
-to obtain them.
-
-After you've downloaded the fonts, then run the following Makefile
-to create the appropriate BDF/PCF fonts. (You will need `ttf2bdf',
-equipped with freetype 1, to create BDF file.)
-
-TTFS= asdr0ntt.ttf:Assamese\
- bndr0ntt.ttf:Bengali\
- dvsr0ntt.ttf:Devanagari\
- gjav0ntt.ttf:Gujarati\
- knum0ntt.ttf:Kannada\
- mlkr0ntt.ttf:Malayalam\
- orsr0ntt.ttf:Oriya\
- pnam0ntt.ttf:Punjabi\
- sdsr0ntt.ttf:Sanskrit\
- tlhm0ntt.ttf:Telugu\
- tmvl0ntt.ttf:Tamil
-
-all:
- for f in ${TTFS}; do \
- ttf=`echo $$f | sed 's/:.*$$//'`; \
- reg=`echo $$f | sed 's/[^:]*://'`; \
- base=`basename $$ttf .ttf`; \
- echo Converting "$$ttf to $$base-XX.bdf/pcf with registry $$reg"; \
- for i in 16 24; do \
- ttf2bdf -p $${i} -r 100 -l 0_255 $$ttf > temp; \
- sed "/^FONT /s/ISO10646-1/$$reg-CDAC/" <temp >$$base-$$i.bdf; \
- bdftopcf $$base-$$i.bdf > $$base-$$i.pcf; \
- done; \
- done
- rm -f temp
-
-clean:
- rm -f *.pcf *.bdf
+Many GNU/Linux systems do not come with development packages by
+default; they just include the files that you need to run Emacs, but
+not those you need to compile it. For example, to compile Emacs with
+X11 support, you may need to install the special `X11 development'
+package. For example, in April 2003, the package names to install
+were `XFree86-devel' and `Xaw3d-devel' on RedHat. On Debian, the
+packages necessary to build the installed version should be
+sufficient; they can be installed using `apt-get build-dep emacs21' in
+Debian 3 and above.