Result for FEEA27F9A002F8012A22FB6F7BD91C68ECCB09FB

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/fontconfig/conf.avail/61-gfs-olga.conf
FileSize310
MD5A829051BF72D10675F80433C7F084D3A
SHA-1FEEA27F9A002F8012A22FB6F7BD91C68ECCB09FB
SHA-2563932C445B757BC33FF7EB36BA876E1139B8BC0F0AF6FA05D756656691473777F
SSDEEP6:TMVcqbcuL3mlnNeciJJCwWNyyPSJJCwWNi9DilnNmA5sJxLn:TMuN232scyjWfPijWsqd5+tn
TLSHT1E0E0EC5E75F45045B1D4590F732439A79E809E7B95B37023309879455FCC5C6545338A
hashlookup:parent-total30
hashlookup:trust100

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Parents (Total: 30)

The searched file hash is included in 30 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD564FB14DAA9A27B57230887CF1ECB39CC
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 indepedently, not as members of a typefamily. The mechanisation of typecutting 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 digitised 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
PackageRelease12.fc15
PackageVersion20060908
SHA-104D8985412029B687C28D1D933C802EA6BB97BE0
SHA-2563406AFB0F22258013FA7D372EF38F4ADC0B0A8F207F2A128CDDFF25987A48197
Key Value
MD54A517CDEE4A818032495B71684B26CDB
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 indepedently, not as members of a typefamily. The mechanisation of typecutting 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 digitised 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
PackageRelease15.fc19
PackageVersion20060908
SHA-107F7F037624E13D47A4ADECE066C19211974FE32
SHA-256EBEF2F45B525B62381657F7FFB9C99322F675CFCA06410D48EB2A97F009B6486
Key Value
MD562CA5509DF55D1ADD1940DD1AF0CBD64
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 indepedently, not as members of a typefamily. The mechanisation of typecutting 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 digitised 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
PackageRelease18.fc21
PackageVersion20060908
SHA-111A04BDDF05D8AAB04DFF5978C769EDDE0064C90
SHA-256A75A5A28E7C78350D7A2055C27F9FD24C573247E6E43C0EDF8434B3F87AB867D
Key Value
MD5D2304D86D7080472B508F5294A633C3C
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 indepedently, not as members of a typefamily. The mechanisation of typecutting 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 digitised 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
PackageRelease12.fc15
PackageVersion20060908
SHA-118AF0A8090DD80EEDE56EF9D026D8C2F44975AA1
SHA-25653222DF91828091B6EE1E88B46C4FA6C3487DC92D0EA2D8D5E734712EE6CA51C
Key Value
MD5243074ED4D7A5FF413FF8A079DAF9E40
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 indepedently, not as members of a typefamily. The mechanisation of typecutting 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 digitised 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
PackageRelease18.fc21
PackageVersion20060908
SHA-125F7EBFCF63B3AE65AADB8412A5ADDE1E10EFBE4
SHA-256331266FFFE8845FFED18782410302EFFD6A40F5E24FA378BFD1E71B086D65D31
Key Value
MD5627C3D7EA4CCF6FFB4A1EAE32161840C
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 indepedently, not as members of a typefamily. The mechanisation of typecutting 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 digitised 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
PackageRelease18.fc21
PackageVersion20060908
SHA-12C2EF24F88E5EDA0D3848CBA87EF9AB565178F15
SHA-256817759E4D79D6D39A7124C02DB51F2FFF530CF84DF20E1C32BD1E68D67129ADF
Key Value
MD5AAB79170B9902C30918C8396322E488F
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 indepedently, not as members of a typefamily. The mechanisation of typecutting 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 digitised 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
PackageRelease19.fc23
PackageVersion20060908
SHA-1350BE667CD5245814BE48BEECF9E360A41974173
SHA-256B309B8EF00D9339557C370D840ABA8ED3FFF2CC742EBE010D2D58A6EA16AE5F1
Key Value
MD50D4DB63896D5E16D1ABB64236BDD3474
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 indepedently, not as members of a typefamily. The mechanisation of typecutting 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 digitised 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
PackageRelease15.fc19
PackageVersion20060908
SHA-13707A3D156581A9DBF3F0398267A339813E4123C
SHA-2564CBAEEEEAE5F1DA50F79F578BC16A5B5C54EEF0BCA1DF0F2BBE054557E4E1064
Key Value
MD554252D0080F36362CABF0EAE46B19933
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 indepedently, not as members of a typefamily. The mechanisation of typecutting 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 digitised 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
PackageRelease19.fc23
PackageVersion20060908
SHA-1396298E5A3014F7239E58DC5407A7E30AA42A7AE
SHA-256421113E29E188FDAE5D30CC271048AF7F630B47BCC0C53593D15E2B82706C538
Key Value
MD5590B13A141A7EA4E914478529B9A61CB
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 indepedently, not as members of a typefamily. The mechanisation of typecutting 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 digitised 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
PackageRelease13.fc17
PackageVersion20060908
SHA-13E427BB28D29583374531DBBC62EEB258F09A4A9
SHA-2566D26688AEABD8E439CA1A584B828E88EBA69822FBAE7799590CDE94BA9D5AE8D