Result for 435835A588263F9971E95637FC43BD6874705C4A

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/metainfo/org.fedoraproject.gfs-olga-fonts.metainfo.xml
FileSize1614
MD59EB855341560CD6ACA37A78F5D5AE5AE
SHA-1435835A588263F9971E95637FC43BD6874705C4A
SHA-256F9F8933FFB4E15FAFCF2A4FF4DE0192A7B3F3DBF6250CF019B1ABD499653E720
SSDEEP48:cW6CBnuOu8ssTw2CdVjjhRQLQ73Ja679p:6Kn3q2mVjFisnp
TLSHT108314150F641D23393830E42FF6D96917B1DE9391342BD16B8C584A93AD249A42BB3CA
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

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Parents (Total: 1)

The searched file hash is included in 1 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD58ADCFBB4514E15A3327A874F21B1F306
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionIn Greece the terms italic and oblique have the same meaning since they are borrowed from the Latin typographic practice without any real historical equivalent in Greek history. Until the end of the 19th century Greek typefaces were cut and cast independently, not as members of a font family. The mechanization of type cutting allowed the transformation of upright Greek typefaces to oblique designs. Nonetheless, the typesetting practice of a cursive Greek font to complement an upright one did not survive the 19th century. The experimental font GFS Olga (1995) attempts to revive this lost tradition. The typeface was designed and digitized by George Matthiopoulos, based on the historical Porson Greek type (1803) with the intention to be the companion of the upright GFS Didot font whenever there is a need for an italic alternative.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamegfs-olga-fonts
PackageRelease3.fc32
PackageVersion20160509
SHA-1ED9848C09C86E49BEDB3C118D201C5D84B8BBB1F
SHA-2568B395BA54FA722589710D59033323451E1A747CD41BD2BD8AFB93D09C0CD41FF