| <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> |
| <!-- |
| Fallback Fonts |
| |
| This file specifies the fonts, and the priority order, that will be searched for any |
| glyphs not handled by the default fonts specified in /system/etc/system_fonts.xml. |
| Each entry consists of a family tag and a list of files (file names) which support that |
| family. The fonts for each family are listed in the order of the styles that they |
| handle (the order is: regular, bold, italic, and bold-italic). The order in which the |
| families are listed in this file represents the order in which these fallback fonts |
| will be searched for glyphs that are not supported by the default system fonts (which are |
| found in /system/etc/system_fonts.xml). |
| |
| Note that there is not nameset for fallback fonts, unlike the fonts specified in |
| system_fonts.xml. The ability to support specific names in fallback fonts may be supported |
| in the future. For now, the lack of files entries here is an indicator to the system that |
| these are fallback fonts, instead of default named system fonts. |
| |
| There is another optional file in /vendor/etc/fallback_fonts.xml. That file can be used to |
| provide references to other font families that should be used in addition to the default |
| fallback fonts. That file can also specify the order in which the fallback fonts should be |
| searched, to ensure that a vendor-provided font will be used before another fallback font |
| which happens to handle the same glyph. |
| |
| Han languages (Chinese, Japanese, and Korean) share a common range of unicode characters; |
| their ordering in the fallback or vendor files gives priority to the first in the list. |
| Locale-specific ordering can be configured by adding language and region codes to the end |
| of the filename (e.g. /system/etc/fallback_fonts-ja.xml). When no region code is used, |
| as with this example, all regions are matched. Use separate files for each supported locale. |
| The standard fallback file (fallback_fonts.xml) is used when a locale does not have its own |
| file. All fallback files must contain the same complete set of fonts; only their ordering |
| can differ. |
| --> |
| <familyset> |
| <family> |
| <fileset> |
| <file>DroidSansArabic.ttf</file> |
| </fileset> |
| </family> |
| <family> |
| <fileset> |
| <file>DroidSansEthiopic-Regular.ttf</file> |
| </fileset> |
| </family> |
| <family> |
| <fileset> |
| <file>DroidSansHebrew-Regular.ttf</file> |
| <file>DroidSansHebrew-Bold.ttf</file> |
| </fileset> |
| </family> |
| <family> |
| <fileset> |
| <file>DroidSansThai.ttf</file> |
| </fileset> |
| </family> |
| <family> |
| <fileset> |
| <file>DroidSansArmenian.ttf</file> |
| </fileset> |
| </family> |
| <family> |
| <fileset> |
| <file>DroidSansGeorgian.ttf</file> |
| </fileset> |
| </family> |
| <family> |
| <fileset> |
| <file>Lohit-Devanagari.ttf</file> |
| </fileset> |
| </family> |
| <family> |
| <fileset> |
| <file>Lohit-Bengali.ttf</file> |
| </fileset> |
| </family> |
| <family> |
| <fileset> |
| <file>Lohit-Tamil.ttf</file> |
| </fileset> |
| </family> |
| <family> |
| <fileset> |
| <file>AndroidEmoji.ttf</file> |
| </fileset> |
| </family> |
| <family> |
| <fileset> |
| <file>DroidSansFallback.ttf</file> |
| </fileset> |
| </family> |
| </familyset> |