Result for D53E79AD54B8AF75834D7E5310F4205615002030

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/fonts-gfs-solomos/changelog.Debian.gz
FileSize1112
MD5ED4DDB380C69815A9FC52C70F561B411
SHA-1D53E79AD54B8AF75834D7E5310F4205615002030
SHA-256A376B5FCEC1BA0B23A71E58C9AAD703C781B94A98706CBD4EDE6FD3BA20F2370
SSDEEP24:XKN0IaCXKibGTHqz097B0yhVu0NZrGWeh5oQn0YzNz+cyyc:XC0kXlGTHxbhV9Zrgbv0YzNzi
TLSHT14E21E91C6BEABB88D486477C9ADF7C5A003A6951CE95F7402192E6150CA25C6CC46EAC
hashlookup:parent-total2
hashlookup:trust60

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Parents (Total: 2)

The searched file hash is included in 2 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize40572
MD590265D08FC89B3E08F828A607A1834CD
PackageDescriptionancient Greek oblique font From the middle of the 19th century an italic font with many calligraphic overtones was introduced into Greek printing. Its source is unknown, but it almost certainly was the product of a German or Italian foundry. In the first type specimen printed in Greece by the typecutter K. Miliadis (1850), the font was listed anonymously along others of 11pts and in the Gr. Doumas' undated specimen appeared as «11pt Greek inclined». For most of the second half of the century the type was used extensively as an italic for emphasis in words, sentences or excerpts. In 1889, the folio size Type Specimen of Anestis Konstantinidis' publishing, printing and type founding establishment also included the type as «Greek inclined [9 & 12 pt]». . Nevertheless, the excessively calligraphic style of the characters, combined with the steep and uncomfortable obliqueness of the capitals, was out of favour in the 20th century and the type did not survive the conformity of the mechanical type cutting and casting. The font has been digitally revived, as part of our typographic tradition, by George D. Matthiopoulos and is part of GFS' type library under the name GFS Solomos, in commemoration of the great Greek poet of the 19th century, Dionisios Solomos.
PackageMaintainerDebian Fonts Task Force <pkg-fonts-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamefonts-gfs-solomos
PackageSectionfonts
PackageVersion1.1-5
SHA-14D485CA2E1BCACDA90DA470B1D2AB1FF9E45DF4C
SHA-25675AD48A4776DFE877E65788947359769B4E13197FDEC601CECE6438D4598FD1E
Key Value
FileSize40722
MD576D288D8D1901781A635C23870EEA87D
PackageDescriptionancient Greek oblique font From the middle of the 19th century an italic font with many calligraphic overtones was introduced into Greek printing. Its source is unknown, but it almost certainly was the product of a German or Italian foundry. In the first type specimen printed in Greece by the typecutter K. Miliadis (1850), the font was listed anonymously along others of 11pts and in the Gr. Doumas' undated specimen appeared as «11pt Greek inclined». For most of the second half of the century the type was used extensively as an italic for emphasis in words, sentences or excerpts. In 1889, the folio size Type Specimen of Anestis Konstantinidis' publishing, printing and type founding establishment also included the type as «Greek inclined [9 & 12 pt]». . Nevertheless, the excessively calligraphic style of the characters, combined with the steep and uncomfortable obliqueness of the capitals, was out of favour in the 20th century and the type did not survive the conformity of the mechanical type cutting and casting. The font has been digitally revived, as part of our typographic tradition, by George D. Matthiopoulos and is part of GFS' type library under the name GFS Solomos, in commemoration of the great Greek poet of the 19th century, Dionisios Solomos.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefonts-gfs-solomos
PackageSectionfonts
PackageVersion1.1-5
SHA-13D63C4A749D578B900677477058C78896E7E5D2F
SHA-25695BA213FF3DA4BD8C97AD621528A3CE510A7AFB41D178290D72F4E8C8FD91A85