SIMILAR FREE FONTS for Microsoft YaHei UI Light. This font is part of Microsoft Windows 10 software package so it cannot be downloaded separately. If you have installed Microsoft Windows 10 it should be available. If you don't have it you can try some similar fonts here.
- After that, you can update your Ubuntu repository cache and install the Microsoft fonts like this: sudo apt update && sudo apt install ttf-mscorefonts-installer. Press tab to select OK and the press enter when the Microsoft’s End user agreement appears. Press tab to highlight the selection. Click Yes to accept the Microsoft’s agreement.
- If other Chinese fonts are installed, and you are rendering a website with CSS code that does not call for Microsoft YaHei but you wish to use it (if you've determined it's legal and the website was created on a Windows system), you could either edit the CSS (e.g. Via Web Adjuster's -headAppend='.
Font Full Name: | 微软雅黑 Light Regular |
Font Family: | 微软雅黑 Light |
Font Style: | |
Font Version: | Version 6.21 |
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- ·微软雅黑 Light Regular
- ·微软雅黑 Light Regular
- ·微软雅黑 Light Regular
- ·微软雅黑 Light Regular
- ·微软雅黑 Light Regular
- ·微软雅黑 Light Regular
- ·微软雅黑 Light Regular
- ·微软雅黑 Light Regular
- ·微软雅黑 Light Regular
- ·微软雅黑 Light Regular
- ·微软雅黑 Light Regular
- ·微软雅黑 Light Regular Version 0.75
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- ·微软雅黑 Light Regular Version 1.01
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- ·微软雅黑 Light Regular Version 6.21
- ·微软雅黑 Light Regular Version 6.21
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- ·微软雅黑 Light Regular Version 6.20
- ·微软雅黑 Light Regular Version 1.01
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Loophole in Microsoft YaHei font license?
Most free Chinese fonts are not well suited to being displayed at small pixel sizes on low-DPI devices. In general, you must choose between either:- getting CJK-LaTeX to render Arphic PL fonts at low DPI, and substituting variants for any Chinese characters not in the original GB2312/Big5 set---this might be an awkward setup for your application;
- or putting up with bad placement of the strokes (causing, for example, end-of-sentence Chinese stops to appear lop-sided instead of circular, and baselines to be uneven),
- or use blurry anti-aliasing (if your output device or format even supports shading),
- or use a set of bitmap fonts (e.g. Wenquanyi Bitmap Song)---these display well at the specific pixel sizes they were designed for, but look bad at other sizes (and if you want to get a modern Web browser to do the rendering then you might find it refuses to load bitmap fonts and you have to use the --render options of Web Adjuster or something).
Android users might think the Noto CJK font works well, but that's only if your device has a high DPI and won't carry over to an image file of limited size that also aims for compatibility with low-DPI devices.
The non-free font 'Microsoft YaHei' commissioned for Windows Vista was extremely well 'hinted' for use at many small pixel sizes (9px+) and is also completely scalable. (Additionally it makes a reasonable font for the display of Pinyin---unlike the earlier 'SimSun' font, it doesn't display 'a' as ``ɑ' which pinyin's inventor Zhou Youguang dismissed.) But is YaHei legal to use outside of Microsoft Windows?
The 1996 through 2002 versions of Microsoft's Latin 'Core fonts for the Web' came with license agreements that did not restrict which operating system you may use, as long as the downloads were provided as-is with nothing added (so tools to adapt them for other operating systems were provided separately). This practice was stopped in 2002, apparently because they didn't like how widely these fonts were being used in non-Microsoft systems, and subsequent font releases (including the Chinese YaHei font) came with more restrictive licenses that tended to require all users to be on Windows.
Microsoft placed a file called VistaFont_CHS.EXE
on the Official Microsoft Download Center (spelled the American way) on 20th May 2008, under the name 'Simplified Chinese ClearType fonts for Windows XP' (the font was commissioned for Vista but backported to XP). The click-through EULA said you can 'install and use any number of copies of the software on your devices running validly licensed copies of Microsoft Windows XP, Microsoft Windows Server 2003 and Microsoft Windows Vista' and 'you may not copy, install or use the fonts on other devices.'
So you might think 'OK, let's boot Windows on my old dual-boot machine, install the font onto that validly-licensed copy of Windows, and then reboot into GNU/Linux on the same machine and set it to use the font files on the Windows partition'. But the EULA comes back with 'You may use the fonts that accompany this software only to display and print content from a device running a Microsoft Windows operating system' (emphasis mine).
But there might be a loophole on this last point, because:
- The EULA is first presented in Chinese, and it doesn't say the English version takes precedence in the event of disagreement, so it might be reasonable to claim that the Chinese version has priority by way of it being presented first---and note I say 'Chinese version' not 'Chinese translation' because how do we know which language was a translation?---for all we can tell from that self-contained 'entire agreement' EULA, the Chinese might have been the original and the English might be the imperfect translation,
- and the Chinese version of that sentence is 您可以使用本软件附带的字体进行显示和打印,但显示和打印的内容必须来自运行Microsoft Windows操作系统的设备 which I understand as 'you may use fonts included in this software to display and print, but the content being displayed and printed must have originally come from equipment running the Microsoft Windows operating system'. In other words, if you download Chinese text from a website whose creators used Windows, then you may use the YaHei font to display it even if you are not using Windows.
- And the Chinese version of 'not use the fonts on other devices' comes at the end of the same Condition 4 that just said you can use them if you're displaying content that originated on a Windows system (oh, and that there are restrictions on embedding, and that downloads to printers and other output devices must be temporary, but that sentence seems to act parenthetically and shouldn't get in the way of the fact that the 'other' in 'no other devices' at the end of Condition 4 now means other than devices currently in use for displaying 'content that originally came from a Windows system' at the start of Condition 4).
In some jurisdictions, there are also local laws that override Microsoft's agreements and permit all copying for your personal, non-commercial use as long as you have legally obtained the original on a permanent basis---so if you purchased a second-hand laptop that came with a legal copy of Vista, you may copy its .ttf
files to another GNU/Linux machine for your personal use. But the UK's October 2014 'private copying exception' (a) didn't apply to computer programs---TrueType hinting code might well count as a 'program'---and (b) was quashed by a judicial review on 17th July 2015 (and the UK government said it was 'not intending to take further action to reintroduce an exception'), so it seems if you are in the UK you must rely only on the permissions Microsoft itself gave---which, if my interpretation above is correct, means you must ensure the content you display was originally created on a Windows system.
If you do determine it's legal for you to use Microsoft YaHei in your particular circumstances, you can enable it for one non-root user of a modern GNU/Linux environment by adding the .ttf
file to your ~/.fonts/TTF
directory (create it if it's not there) and running fc-cache -vf (you can verify this worked by checking that fc-list 'Microsoft YaHei' produces output).
It should then be available to Windows applications in WINE, although not all applications can be set to use it because WINE's font-selection API doesn't quite work like real Windows---a workaround is to edit .wine/system.reg
and under [SoftwareMicrosoftWindows NTCurrentVersionFontSubstitutes]
set 'MS Shell Dlg'='Microsoft YaHei'
then use 'MS Shell Dlg' in the application (and if that doesn't work, try adding a font like Droid Sans Fallback to the system and set 'Droid Sans Fallback'='Microsoft YaHei'
in FontSubstitutes
so it can be selected that way).
Microsoft Yahei Font Download
If Yahei is the only Chinese font on the system (e.g. on a VM) then Web browsers like Firefox should select it by default, in which case you'd better check it's legal and that all Chinese text you display was created on a Windows system. If other Chinese fonts are installed, and you are rendering a website with CSS code that does not call for Microsoft YaHei but you wish to use it (if you've determined it's legal and the website was created on a Windows system), you could either edit the CSS (e.g. via Web Adjuster's --headAppend='<style> *:lang(cmn) { font-family: Microsoft Yahei !important } </style>' --js-upstream),or else add an override in ~/.fonts.conf
but this is less reliable across rendering engines.
Download Microsoft Yahei Font
This is not legal advice---I'm a computer scientist, not a lawyer; take my observations at your own risk! But it does seem like a loophole to me.
Microsoft Yahei Font Bold Download
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