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I'm not sure what you mean? I don't use email lists enough to know if they
usually block attachments, so I'll try screen shots in the next email.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jason H" <scorp1us@xxxxxxxxx>
To: "Nikos Chantziaras" <realnc@xxxxxxxx>, qt-interest@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Tuesday, April 13, 2010 2:50:56 PM GMT -06:00 US/Canada Central
Subject: Re: [Qt-interest] Is Qt the best choice for cross-platform desktop GUI
applications? Mac OS X (Cocoa, Aqua)? KDE, GNOME, Windows 7
Also, when printing letters run together. While this is a problem for rn (r n
looks like m, in Arial) Qt will do it with 's' and 'e' in very inconsistent
manner. Sometimes 's' and 'e' touch, sometimes they don't and that is true for
the letter next to them as well. Sometimes "se" bleeds, and sometimes it
doesn't. it makes it look really sloppy.
----- Original Message ----
From: Nikos Chantziaras <realnc@xxxxxxxx>
To: qt-interest@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Tue, April 13, 2010 2:40:46 PM
Subject: Re: [Qt-interest] Is Qt the best choice for cross-platform desktop GUI
applications? Mac OS X (Cocoa, Aqua)? KDE, GNOME, Windows 7
On 04/13/2010 08:45 AM, nobodyhere wrote:
> Okay, so I actually tried out two Qt Creator sample projects on Mac OS X. I
> don't know what you mean about this alleged font rendering problem... The
> font looks correct to me.
Don't you see broken kerning? For example, when displaying the string
"Yo", the "o" should be under the "Y", but it isn't. In text oriented
apps (where the focus is on actually reading text), this makes the
application look lame.
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