Although I am the author, it is some time since I last looked at the code for efax-gtk. However, I am pretty sure that the fax top header (if that is what you are concerned with) is always in ASCII. As for efax (if you are using efax separately) from what I remember it might possibly allow an ISO-8859-7 font. You could try it and see, but as I say, I don't think this is supported by efax-gtk, nor do I remember the requirements for efax's -f option.
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Thank you for your reply.
I mean the fax's body, with mixed Latin and Greek words. I tried efix and efax separately -f Full path of font. It doesn't recognize the .pcf.gz, for .pcf gives error unknown format, for ttf gives error ( the font file is bigger than 49kb even if it is much smaller). I decide to make pfds, convert them to tiff and after transmit them.
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Please, which is the right syntax for efix option -f so i can change font and use some with greek characters?
Although I am the author, it is some time since I last looked at the code for efax-gtk. However, I am pretty sure that the fax top header (if that is what you are concerned with) is always in ASCII. As for efax (if you are using efax separately) from what I remember it might possibly allow an ISO-8859-7 font. You could try it and see, but as I say, I don't think this is supported by efax-gtk, nor do I remember the requirements for efax's -f option.
Thank you for your reply.
I mean the fax's body, with mixed Latin and Greek words. I tried efix and efax separately -f Full path of font. It doesn't recognize the .pcf.gz, for .pcf gives error unknown format, for ttf gives error ( the font file is bigger than 49kb even if it is much smaller). I decide to make pfds, convert them to tiff and after transmit them.