How do I reset gnome font configuration?












18















How do I reset the font settings - actual font and size - to their default?



(I changed some values in System->Preferences->Appearance->Fonts)



This is particularly important with the new Ubuntu font in Maverick - for instance I'm interested to see what the default settings are.










share|improve this question





























    18















    How do I reset the font settings - actual font and size - to their default?



    (I changed some values in System->Preferences->Appearance->Fonts)



    This is particularly important with the new Ubuntu font in Maverick - for instance I'm interested to see what the default settings are.










    share|improve this question



























      18












      18








      18


      12






      How do I reset the font settings - actual font and size - to their default?



      (I changed some values in System->Preferences->Appearance->Fonts)



      This is particularly important with the new Ubuntu font in Maverick - for instance I'm interested to see what the default settings are.










      share|improve this question
















      How do I reset the font settings - actual font and size - to their default?



      (I changed some values in System->Preferences->Appearance->Fonts)



      This is particularly important with the new Ubuntu font in Maverick - for instance I'm interested to see what the default settings are.







      gnome fonts configuration






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Apr 19 '17 at 11:00









      jrg

      39.5k50152236




      39.5k50152236










      asked Sep 30 '10 at 20:14









      81288128

      24.9k22101138




      24.9k22101138






















          7 Answers
          7






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          19














          Ubuntu 15.10 and before



          To reset the customization of gnome fonts done using System -> Preferences -> Appearance -> Fonts use the following commands.



          Basically these commands remove the customization by deleting the user instance of the gconf keys in which case the environment falls back to system defaults.



          gconftool-2 --unset /desktop/gnome/interface/font_name
          gconftool-2 --unset /desktop/gnome/interface/document_font_name
          gconftool-2 --unset /desktop/gnome/interface/monospace_font_name
          gconftool-2 --unset /apps/metacity/general/titlebar_font
          gconftool-2 --unset /apps/nautilus/preferences/desktop_font


          Though the key identifiers end with name (at least in the first three instances) what is stored against them is the complete font spec (like family/font name, size, style etc).



          Since these keys are stored inside your home directory they take effect in all ubuntu installations that share the home partition. The .gconf directory inside your home directory is where all this info is stored.




          1. ~/.gconf/desktop/gnome/interface/%gconf.xml stores the info for


            • /desktop/gnome/interface/font_name

            • /desktop/gnome/interface/document_font_name

            • /desktop/gnome/interface/monospace_font_name



          2. ~/.gconf/apps/metacity/general/%gconf.xml stores /apps/metacity/general/titlebar_font

          3. ~/.gconf/apps/nautilus/preferences/%gconf.xml stores /apps/nautilus/preferences/desktop_font


          So a crude way to reset the font info could be to temporarily rename/move these files. However this should be done when the user's gnome session is not active (thus from a tty session a la Ctrl+Alt+F1)



          Of course these files have other keys in the same category that have nothing to do with font properties so moving the entire file would mean that the customizations for those are also lost. The way to deal key-wise is using gconftool-2 as mentioned above.






          share|improve this answer


























          • I wonder how size information is linked to this. Unsetting the gconf keys seems to reset this as well, but I can't see it stored anywhere!

            – 8128
            Oct 1 '10 at 8:54






          • 1





            Good point. I have edited my answer to clarify this.

            – koushik
            Oct 1 '10 at 9:31



















          19





          +500









          Ubuntu 16.04 and after



          gconftool-2 has been superseeded by gsettings on Ubuntu 16.04+ and in other GNOME based systems.



          Nowadays you can simply run the following in a terminal window to reset all your desktop font settings:



          gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface font-name
          gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface document-font-name
          gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface monospace-font-name
          gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences titlebar-font
          gsettings reset org.gnome.nautilus.desktop font
          gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface text-scaling-factor


          Hope it helps.






          share|improve this answer





















          • 1





            This works in 16.04 too askubuntu.com/a/905134/61218

            – Anwar
            Apr 20 '17 at 8:21






          • 1





            Thanks, It worked! resolve my issue for weird fonts in gnome terminal.

            – Atul Makwana
            Oct 28 '17 at 10:11



















          3














          Copy and paste gconf-watcher into a file on your PC called gconf-watcher. Chmod it to executable. Run it in Terminal and leave it running.



          Change each setting in in SystemPreferencesAppearanceFonts. Look at gconf-watcher's output to find out where it's stored in the gconf tree.



          Now install gconf-editor. It looks and works a bit like the Windows Registry Editor. Use it to "unset" the relevant values. Know that "unset" really means "reset".



          By the way, if I may ask, why is it that you'd like to reset the settings?






          share|improve this answer

































            2














            To change settings on Gnome-3 you can use gsettings .



            To reset all the fonts for an user, you type these commands on the user terminal :



            gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface monospace-font-name 

            gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface document-font-name

            gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface font-name

            gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences titlebar-font


            For the scaling factor this one :



            gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface text-scaling-factor


            To get the current configuration for each settings replace "reset" with "get" .



            You can also do it with GUI by running dconf-editor .






            share|improve this answer

































              1














              Here's a screenshot from a UbuntuGnome 17.04 Live Disc. I installed Mate and Cinnamon Desktiop and noticed some changed fonts when I was using Gnome. So I used the ISO to take a screenshot and change the settings using the gnome tweak tool.



              enter image description here






              share|improve this answer































                1














                Though the answers are pretty upto-date and workable for GNOME3, there is one caveat and that is even when with using gsettings reset ... or gnome-tweak-tools' restore default button, you may not actually get the default fonts defined by the distribution. For example, Ubuntu (with Unity DE) comes with Ubuntu font as default interface font, but if you install another DE on top of this it can change this default settings.



                The values for default fonts actually come from gschema files in /usr/share/glib-2.0/schemas directory. When we install a desktop environment metapackage, it provides overrides file to change these defaults.



                If this kind of things happen, you need to manually revert back the default by writing a custom gschema override file.



                The override files for each GNOME variants



                For each cases, create an override file with this name /usr/share/glib-2.0/schemas/99_default_font_settings.gschema.override file and fill it with the following contents



                Ubuntu with Unity



                [org.gnome.desktop.interface]
                font-name="Ubuntu 11"
                monospace-font-name="Ubuntu Mono 13"

                [org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences]
                titlebar-font='Ubuntu Bold 11'


                Ubuntu with GNOME3



                [org.gnome.desktop.interface]
                font-name="Cantarell 11"
                monospace-font-name="Ubuntu Mono 13"

                [org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences]
                titlebar-font='Cantarell Bold 11'


                Ubuntu MATE



                [org.gnome.desktop.interface]
                document-font-name='Ubuntu 11'
                font-name='Ubuntu 11'
                monospace-font-name='Ubuntu Mono 13'

                [org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences]
                titlebar-font='Ubuntu Bold 11'


                Once the file is saved, use this command to compile the schemas



                sudo glib-compile-schemas /usr/share/glib-2.0/schemas


                Then any of the above methods can be used to reset to the default set by you.



                Alternatively, if you've installed GNOME environment on Ubuntu, removed ubuntu-gnome-default-settings package to get back the ubuntu defaults. MATE's package is ubuntu-mate-default-settings. If you happen to have Ubuntu GNOME as default and installed ubuntu unity, removed ubuntu-settings package.



                Hope this will be helpful to some extent.






                share|improve this answer































                  0














                  I refer to starkus here below - for this pretty window you need to install the package gnome-tweak-tools.




                  sudo apt-get install gnome-tweak-tools



                  sudo reboot




                  Then there you can set the fonts in "Schriften" resp. in "fonts".



                  After changed fonts-settings, then reboot again to get results system-wide.






                  share|improve this answer
























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                    7 Answers
                    7






                    active

                    oldest

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                    7 Answers
                    7






                    active

                    oldest

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                    active

                    oldest

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                    active

                    oldest

                    votes









                    19














                    Ubuntu 15.10 and before



                    To reset the customization of gnome fonts done using System -> Preferences -> Appearance -> Fonts use the following commands.



                    Basically these commands remove the customization by deleting the user instance of the gconf keys in which case the environment falls back to system defaults.



                    gconftool-2 --unset /desktop/gnome/interface/font_name
                    gconftool-2 --unset /desktop/gnome/interface/document_font_name
                    gconftool-2 --unset /desktop/gnome/interface/monospace_font_name
                    gconftool-2 --unset /apps/metacity/general/titlebar_font
                    gconftool-2 --unset /apps/nautilus/preferences/desktop_font


                    Though the key identifiers end with name (at least in the first three instances) what is stored against them is the complete font spec (like family/font name, size, style etc).



                    Since these keys are stored inside your home directory they take effect in all ubuntu installations that share the home partition. The .gconf directory inside your home directory is where all this info is stored.




                    1. ~/.gconf/desktop/gnome/interface/%gconf.xml stores the info for


                      • /desktop/gnome/interface/font_name

                      • /desktop/gnome/interface/document_font_name

                      • /desktop/gnome/interface/monospace_font_name



                    2. ~/.gconf/apps/metacity/general/%gconf.xml stores /apps/metacity/general/titlebar_font

                    3. ~/.gconf/apps/nautilus/preferences/%gconf.xml stores /apps/nautilus/preferences/desktop_font


                    So a crude way to reset the font info could be to temporarily rename/move these files. However this should be done when the user's gnome session is not active (thus from a tty session a la Ctrl+Alt+F1)



                    Of course these files have other keys in the same category that have nothing to do with font properties so moving the entire file would mean that the customizations for those are also lost. The way to deal key-wise is using gconftool-2 as mentioned above.






                    share|improve this answer


























                    • I wonder how size information is linked to this. Unsetting the gconf keys seems to reset this as well, but I can't see it stored anywhere!

                      – 8128
                      Oct 1 '10 at 8:54






                    • 1





                      Good point. I have edited my answer to clarify this.

                      – koushik
                      Oct 1 '10 at 9:31
















                    19














                    Ubuntu 15.10 and before



                    To reset the customization of gnome fonts done using System -> Preferences -> Appearance -> Fonts use the following commands.



                    Basically these commands remove the customization by deleting the user instance of the gconf keys in which case the environment falls back to system defaults.



                    gconftool-2 --unset /desktop/gnome/interface/font_name
                    gconftool-2 --unset /desktop/gnome/interface/document_font_name
                    gconftool-2 --unset /desktop/gnome/interface/monospace_font_name
                    gconftool-2 --unset /apps/metacity/general/titlebar_font
                    gconftool-2 --unset /apps/nautilus/preferences/desktop_font


                    Though the key identifiers end with name (at least in the first three instances) what is stored against them is the complete font spec (like family/font name, size, style etc).



                    Since these keys are stored inside your home directory they take effect in all ubuntu installations that share the home partition. The .gconf directory inside your home directory is where all this info is stored.




                    1. ~/.gconf/desktop/gnome/interface/%gconf.xml stores the info for


                      • /desktop/gnome/interface/font_name

                      • /desktop/gnome/interface/document_font_name

                      • /desktop/gnome/interface/monospace_font_name



                    2. ~/.gconf/apps/metacity/general/%gconf.xml stores /apps/metacity/general/titlebar_font

                    3. ~/.gconf/apps/nautilus/preferences/%gconf.xml stores /apps/nautilus/preferences/desktop_font


                    So a crude way to reset the font info could be to temporarily rename/move these files. However this should be done when the user's gnome session is not active (thus from a tty session a la Ctrl+Alt+F1)



                    Of course these files have other keys in the same category that have nothing to do with font properties so moving the entire file would mean that the customizations for those are also lost. The way to deal key-wise is using gconftool-2 as mentioned above.






                    share|improve this answer


























                    • I wonder how size information is linked to this. Unsetting the gconf keys seems to reset this as well, but I can't see it stored anywhere!

                      – 8128
                      Oct 1 '10 at 8:54






                    • 1





                      Good point. I have edited my answer to clarify this.

                      – koushik
                      Oct 1 '10 at 9:31














                    19












                    19








                    19







                    Ubuntu 15.10 and before



                    To reset the customization of gnome fonts done using System -> Preferences -> Appearance -> Fonts use the following commands.



                    Basically these commands remove the customization by deleting the user instance of the gconf keys in which case the environment falls back to system defaults.



                    gconftool-2 --unset /desktop/gnome/interface/font_name
                    gconftool-2 --unset /desktop/gnome/interface/document_font_name
                    gconftool-2 --unset /desktop/gnome/interface/monospace_font_name
                    gconftool-2 --unset /apps/metacity/general/titlebar_font
                    gconftool-2 --unset /apps/nautilus/preferences/desktop_font


                    Though the key identifiers end with name (at least in the first three instances) what is stored against them is the complete font spec (like family/font name, size, style etc).



                    Since these keys are stored inside your home directory they take effect in all ubuntu installations that share the home partition. The .gconf directory inside your home directory is where all this info is stored.




                    1. ~/.gconf/desktop/gnome/interface/%gconf.xml stores the info for


                      • /desktop/gnome/interface/font_name

                      • /desktop/gnome/interface/document_font_name

                      • /desktop/gnome/interface/monospace_font_name



                    2. ~/.gconf/apps/metacity/general/%gconf.xml stores /apps/metacity/general/titlebar_font

                    3. ~/.gconf/apps/nautilus/preferences/%gconf.xml stores /apps/nautilus/preferences/desktop_font


                    So a crude way to reset the font info could be to temporarily rename/move these files. However this should be done when the user's gnome session is not active (thus from a tty session a la Ctrl+Alt+F1)



                    Of course these files have other keys in the same category that have nothing to do with font properties so moving the entire file would mean that the customizations for those are also lost. The way to deal key-wise is using gconftool-2 as mentioned above.






                    share|improve this answer















                    Ubuntu 15.10 and before



                    To reset the customization of gnome fonts done using System -> Preferences -> Appearance -> Fonts use the following commands.



                    Basically these commands remove the customization by deleting the user instance of the gconf keys in which case the environment falls back to system defaults.



                    gconftool-2 --unset /desktop/gnome/interface/font_name
                    gconftool-2 --unset /desktop/gnome/interface/document_font_name
                    gconftool-2 --unset /desktop/gnome/interface/monospace_font_name
                    gconftool-2 --unset /apps/metacity/general/titlebar_font
                    gconftool-2 --unset /apps/nautilus/preferences/desktop_font


                    Though the key identifiers end with name (at least in the first three instances) what is stored against them is the complete font spec (like family/font name, size, style etc).



                    Since these keys are stored inside your home directory they take effect in all ubuntu installations that share the home partition. The .gconf directory inside your home directory is where all this info is stored.




                    1. ~/.gconf/desktop/gnome/interface/%gconf.xml stores the info for


                      • /desktop/gnome/interface/font_name

                      • /desktop/gnome/interface/document_font_name

                      • /desktop/gnome/interface/monospace_font_name



                    2. ~/.gconf/apps/metacity/general/%gconf.xml stores /apps/metacity/general/titlebar_font

                    3. ~/.gconf/apps/nautilus/preferences/%gconf.xml stores /apps/nautilus/preferences/desktop_font


                    So a crude way to reset the font info could be to temporarily rename/move these files. However this should be done when the user's gnome session is not active (thus from a tty session a la Ctrl+Alt+F1)



                    Of course these files have other keys in the same category that have nothing to do with font properties so moving the entire file would mean that the customizations for those are also lost. The way to deal key-wise is using gconftool-2 as mentioned above.







                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited Apr 21 '17 at 6:49









                    8128

                    24.9k22101138




                    24.9k22101138










                    answered Oct 1 '10 at 6:50









                    koushikkoushik

                    3,64632032




                    3,64632032













                    • I wonder how size information is linked to this. Unsetting the gconf keys seems to reset this as well, but I can't see it stored anywhere!

                      – 8128
                      Oct 1 '10 at 8:54






                    • 1





                      Good point. I have edited my answer to clarify this.

                      – koushik
                      Oct 1 '10 at 9:31



















                    • I wonder how size information is linked to this. Unsetting the gconf keys seems to reset this as well, but I can't see it stored anywhere!

                      – 8128
                      Oct 1 '10 at 8:54






                    • 1





                      Good point. I have edited my answer to clarify this.

                      – koushik
                      Oct 1 '10 at 9:31

















                    I wonder how size information is linked to this. Unsetting the gconf keys seems to reset this as well, but I can't see it stored anywhere!

                    – 8128
                    Oct 1 '10 at 8:54





                    I wonder how size information is linked to this. Unsetting the gconf keys seems to reset this as well, but I can't see it stored anywhere!

                    – 8128
                    Oct 1 '10 at 8:54




                    1




                    1





                    Good point. I have edited my answer to clarify this.

                    – koushik
                    Oct 1 '10 at 9:31





                    Good point. I have edited my answer to clarify this.

                    – koushik
                    Oct 1 '10 at 9:31













                    19





                    +500









                    Ubuntu 16.04 and after



                    gconftool-2 has been superseeded by gsettings on Ubuntu 16.04+ and in other GNOME based systems.



                    Nowadays you can simply run the following in a terminal window to reset all your desktop font settings:



                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface font-name
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface document-font-name
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface monospace-font-name
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences titlebar-font
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.nautilus.desktop font
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface text-scaling-factor


                    Hope it helps.






                    share|improve this answer





















                    • 1





                      This works in 16.04 too askubuntu.com/a/905134/61218

                      – Anwar
                      Apr 20 '17 at 8:21






                    • 1





                      Thanks, It worked! resolve my issue for weird fonts in gnome terminal.

                      – Atul Makwana
                      Oct 28 '17 at 10:11
















                    19





                    +500









                    Ubuntu 16.04 and after



                    gconftool-2 has been superseeded by gsettings on Ubuntu 16.04+ and in other GNOME based systems.



                    Nowadays you can simply run the following in a terminal window to reset all your desktop font settings:



                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface font-name
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface document-font-name
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface monospace-font-name
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences titlebar-font
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.nautilus.desktop font
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface text-scaling-factor


                    Hope it helps.






                    share|improve this answer





















                    • 1





                      This works in 16.04 too askubuntu.com/a/905134/61218

                      – Anwar
                      Apr 20 '17 at 8:21






                    • 1





                      Thanks, It worked! resolve my issue for weird fonts in gnome terminal.

                      – Atul Makwana
                      Oct 28 '17 at 10:11














                    19





                    +500







                    19





                    +500



                    19




                    +500





                    Ubuntu 16.04 and after



                    gconftool-2 has been superseeded by gsettings on Ubuntu 16.04+ and in other GNOME based systems.



                    Nowadays you can simply run the following in a terminal window to reset all your desktop font settings:



                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface font-name
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface document-font-name
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface monospace-font-name
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences titlebar-font
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.nautilus.desktop font
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface text-scaling-factor


                    Hope it helps.






                    share|improve this answer















                    Ubuntu 16.04 and after



                    gconftool-2 has been superseeded by gsettings on Ubuntu 16.04+ and in other GNOME based systems.



                    Nowadays you can simply run the following in a terminal window to reset all your desktop font settings:



                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface font-name
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface document-font-name
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface monospace-font-name
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences titlebar-font
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.nautilus.desktop font
                    gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface text-scaling-factor


                    Hope it helps.







                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited Apr 21 '17 at 6:51









                    8128

                    24.9k22101138




                    24.9k22101138










                    answered Apr 17 '17 at 21:01









                    dgonzalezdgonzalez

                    4,24541124




                    4,24541124








                    • 1





                      This works in 16.04 too askubuntu.com/a/905134/61218

                      – Anwar
                      Apr 20 '17 at 8:21






                    • 1





                      Thanks, It worked! resolve my issue for weird fonts in gnome terminal.

                      – Atul Makwana
                      Oct 28 '17 at 10:11














                    • 1





                      This works in 16.04 too askubuntu.com/a/905134/61218

                      – Anwar
                      Apr 20 '17 at 8:21






                    • 1





                      Thanks, It worked! resolve my issue for weird fonts in gnome terminal.

                      – Atul Makwana
                      Oct 28 '17 at 10:11








                    1




                    1





                    This works in 16.04 too askubuntu.com/a/905134/61218

                    – Anwar
                    Apr 20 '17 at 8:21





                    This works in 16.04 too askubuntu.com/a/905134/61218

                    – Anwar
                    Apr 20 '17 at 8:21




                    1




                    1





                    Thanks, It worked! resolve my issue for weird fonts in gnome terminal.

                    – Atul Makwana
                    Oct 28 '17 at 10:11





                    Thanks, It worked! resolve my issue for weird fonts in gnome terminal.

                    – Atul Makwana
                    Oct 28 '17 at 10:11











                    3














                    Copy and paste gconf-watcher into a file on your PC called gconf-watcher. Chmod it to executable. Run it in Terminal and leave it running.



                    Change each setting in in SystemPreferencesAppearanceFonts. Look at gconf-watcher's output to find out where it's stored in the gconf tree.



                    Now install gconf-editor. It looks and works a bit like the Windows Registry Editor. Use it to "unset" the relevant values. Know that "unset" really means "reset".



                    By the way, if I may ask, why is it that you'd like to reset the settings?






                    share|improve this answer






























                      3














                      Copy and paste gconf-watcher into a file on your PC called gconf-watcher. Chmod it to executable. Run it in Terminal and leave it running.



                      Change each setting in in SystemPreferencesAppearanceFonts. Look at gconf-watcher's output to find out where it's stored in the gconf tree.



                      Now install gconf-editor. It looks and works a bit like the Windows Registry Editor. Use it to "unset" the relevant values. Know that "unset" really means "reset".



                      By the way, if I may ask, why is it that you'd like to reset the settings?






                      share|improve this answer




























                        3












                        3








                        3







                        Copy and paste gconf-watcher into a file on your PC called gconf-watcher. Chmod it to executable. Run it in Terminal and leave it running.



                        Change each setting in in SystemPreferencesAppearanceFonts. Look at gconf-watcher's output to find out where it's stored in the gconf tree.



                        Now install gconf-editor. It looks and works a bit like the Windows Registry Editor. Use it to "unset" the relevant values. Know that "unset" really means "reset".



                        By the way, if I may ask, why is it that you'd like to reset the settings?






                        share|improve this answer















                        Copy and paste gconf-watcher into a file on your PC called gconf-watcher. Chmod it to executable. Run it in Terminal and leave it running.



                        Change each setting in in SystemPreferencesAppearanceFonts. Look at gconf-watcher's output to find out where it's stored in the gconf tree.



                        Now install gconf-editor. It looks and works a bit like the Windows Registry Editor. Use it to "unset" the relevant values. Know that "unset" really means "reset".



                        By the way, if I may ask, why is it that you'd like to reset the settings?







                        share|improve this answer














                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer








                        edited Feb 19 '12 at 20:13









                        Octavian Damiean

                        11.6k74860




                        11.6k74860










                        answered Feb 15 '12 at 1:18









                        jasonspirojasonspiro

                        1334




                        1334























                            2














                            To change settings on Gnome-3 you can use gsettings .



                            To reset all the fonts for an user, you type these commands on the user terminal :



                            gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface monospace-font-name 

                            gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface document-font-name

                            gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface font-name

                            gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences titlebar-font


                            For the scaling factor this one :



                            gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface text-scaling-factor


                            To get the current configuration for each settings replace "reset" with "get" .



                            You can also do it with GUI by running dconf-editor .






                            share|improve this answer






























                              2














                              To change settings on Gnome-3 you can use gsettings .



                              To reset all the fonts for an user, you type these commands on the user terminal :



                              gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface monospace-font-name 

                              gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface document-font-name

                              gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface font-name

                              gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences titlebar-font


                              For the scaling factor this one :



                              gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface text-scaling-factor


                              To get the current configuration for each settings replace "reset" with "get" .



                              You can also do it with GUI by running dconf-editor .






                              share|improve this answer




























                                2












                                2








                                2







                                To change settings on Gnome-3 you can use gsettings .



                                To reset all the fonts for an user, you type these commands on the user terminal :



                                gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface monospace-font-name 

                                gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface document-font-name

                                gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface font-name

                                gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences titlebar-font


                                For the scaling factor this one :



                                gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface text-scaling-factor


                                To get the current configuration for each settings replace "reset" with "get" .



                                You can also do it with GUI by running dconf-editor .






                                share|improve this answer















                                To change settings on Gnome-3 you can use gsettings .



                                To reset all the fonts for an user, you type these commands on the user terminal :



                                gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface monospace-font-name 

                                gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface document-font-name

                                gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface font-name

                                gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences titlebar-font


                                For the scaling factor this one :



                                gsettings reset org.gnome.desktop.interface text-scaling-factor


                                To get the current configuration for each settings replace "reset" with "get" .



                                You can also do it with GUI by running dconf-editor .







                                share|improve this answer














                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer








                                edited Apr 18 '17 at 11:57

























                                answered Apr 15 '17 at 14:22









                                jeremy.Snidarojeremy.Snidaro

                                914




                                914























                                    1














                                    Here's a screenshot from a UbuntuGnome 17.04 Live Disc. I installed Mate and Cinnamon Desktiop and noticed some changed fonts when I was using Gnome. So I used the ISO to take a screenshot and change the settings using the gnome tweak tool.



                                    enter image description here






                                    share|improve this answer




























                                      1














                                      Here's a screenshot from a UbuntuGnome 17.04 Live Disc. I installed Mate and Cinnamon Desktiop and noticed some changed fonts when I was using Gnome. So I used the ISO to take a screenshot and change the settings using the gnome tweak tool.



                                      enter image description here






                                      share|improve this answer


























                                        1












                                        1








                                        1







                                        Here's a screenshot from a UbuntuGnome 17.04 Live Disc. I installed Mate and Cinnamon Desktiop and noticed some changed fonts when I was using Gnome. So I used the ISO to take a screenshot and change the settings using the gnome tweak tool.



                                        enter image description here






                                        share|improve this answer













                                        Here's a screenshot from a UbuntuGnome 17.04 Live Disc. I installed Mate and Cinnamon Desktiop and noticed some changed fonts when I was using Gnome. So I used the ISO to take a screenshot and change the settings using the gnome tweak tool.



                                        enter image description here







                                        share|improve this answer












                                        share|improve this answer



                                        share|improve this answer










                                        answered Apr 15 '17 at 15:07









                                        starkusstarkus

                                        313513




                                        313513























                                            1














                                            Though the answers are pretty upto-date and workable for GNOME3, there is one caveat and that is even when with using gsettings reset ... or gnome-tweak-tools' restore default button, you may not actually get the default fonts defined by the distribution. For example, Ubuntu (with Unity DE) comes with Ubuntu font as default interface font, but if you install another DE on top of this it can change this default settings.



                                            The values for default fonts actually come from gschema files in /usr/share/glib-2.0/schemas directory. When we install a desktop environment metapackage, it provides overrides file to change these defaults.



                                            If this kind of things happen, you need to manually revert back the default by writing a custom gschema override file.



                                            The override files for each GNOME variants



                                            For each cases, create an override file with this name /usr/share/glib-2.0/schemas/99_default_font_settings.gschema.override file and fill it with the following contents



                                            Ubuntu with Unity



                                            [org.gnome.desktop.interface]
                                            font-name="Ubuntu 11"
                                            monospace-font-name="Ubuntu Mono 13"

                                            [org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences]
                                            titlebar-font='Ubuntu Bold 11'


                                            Ubuntu with GNOME3



                                            [org.gnome.desktop.interface]
                                            font-name="Cantarell 11"
                                            monospace-font-name="Ubuntu Mono 13"

                                            [org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences]
                                            titlebar-font='Cantarell Bold 11'


                                            Ubuntu MATE



                                            [org.gnome.desktop.interface]
                                            document-font-name='Ubuntu 11'
                                            font-name='Ubuntu 11'
                                            monospace-font-name='Ubuntu Mono 13'

                                            [org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences]
                                            titlebar-font='Ubuntu Bold 11'


                                            Once the file is saved, use this command to compile the schemas



                                            sudo glib-compile-schemas /usr/share/glib-2.0/schemas


                                            Then any of the above methods can be used to reset to the default set by you.



                                            Alternatively, if you've installed GNOME environment on Ubuntu, removed ubuntu-gnome-default-settings package to get back the ubuntu defaults. MATE's package is ubuntu-mate-default-settings. If you happen to have Ubuntu GNOME as default and installed ubuntu unity, removed ubuntu-settings package.



                                            Hope this will be helpful to some extent.






                                            share|improve this answer




























                                              1














                                              Though the answers are pretty upto-date and workable for GNOME3, there is one caveat and that is even when with using gsettings reset ... or gnome-tweak-tools' restore default button, you may not actually get the default fonts defined by the distribution. For example, Ubuntu (with Unity DE) comes with Ubuntu font as default interface font, but if you install another DE on top of this it can change this default settings.



                                              The values for default fonts actually come from gschema files in /usr/share/glib-2.0/schemas directory. When we install a desktop environment metapackage, it provides overrides file to change these defaults.



                                              If this kind of things happen, you need to manually revert back the default by writing a custom gschema override file.



                                              The override files for each GNOME variants



                                              For each cases, create an override file with this name /usr/share/glib-2.0/schemas/99_default_font_settings.gschema.override file and fill it with the following contents



                                              Ubuntu with Unity



                                              [org.gnome.desktop.interface]
                                              font-name="Ubuntu 11"
                                              monospace-font-name="Ubuntu Mono 13"

                                              [org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences]
                                              titlebar-font='Ubuntu Bold 11'


                                              Ubuntu with GNOME3



                                              [org.gnome.desktop.interface]
                                              font-name="Cantarell 11"
                                              monospace-font-name="Ubuntu Mono 13"

                                              [org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences]
                                              titlebar-font='Cantarell Bold 11'


                                              Ubuntu MATE



                                              [org.gnome.desktop.interface]
                                              document-font-name='Ubuntu 11'
                                              font-name='Ubuntu 11'
                                              monospace-font-name='Ubuntu Mono 13'

                                              [org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences]
                                              titlebar-font='Ubuntu Bold 11'


                                              Once the file is saved, use this command to compile the schemas



                                              sudo glib-compile-schemas /usr/share/glib-2.0/schemas


                                              Then any of the above methods can be used to reset to the default set by you.



                                              Alternatively, if you've installed GNOME environment on Ubuntu, removed ubuntu-gnome-default-settings package to get back the ubuntu defaults. MATE's package is ubuntu-mate-default-settings. If you happen to have Ubuntu GNOME as default and installed ubuntu unity, removed ubuntu-settings package.



                                              Hope this will be helpful to some extent.






                                              share|improve this answer


























                                                1












                                                1








                                                1







                                                Though the answers are pretty upto-date and workable for GNOME3, there is one caveat and that is even when with using gsettings reset ... or gnome-tweak-tools' restore default button, you may not actually get the default fonts defined by the distribution. For example, Ubuntu (with Unity DE) comes with Ubuntu font as default interface font, but if you install another DE on top of this it can change this default settings.



                                                The values for default fonts actually come from gschema files in /usr/share/glib-2.0/schemas directory. When we install a desktop environment metapackage, it provides overrides file to change these defaults.



                                                If this kind of things happen, you need to manually revert back the default by writing a custom gschema override file.



                                                The override files for each GNOME variants



                                                For each cases, create an override file with this name /usr/share/glib-2.0/schemas/99_default_font_settings.gschema.override file and fill it with the following contents



                                                Ubuntu with Unity



                                                [org.gnome.desktop.interface]
                                                font-name="Ubuntu 11"
                                                monospace-font-name="Ubuntu Mono 13"

                                                [org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences]
                                                titlebar-font='Ubuntu Bold 11'


                                                Ubuntu with GNOME3



                                                [org.gnome.desktop.interface]
                                                font-name="Cantarell 11"
                                                monospace-font-name="Ubuntu Mono 13"

                                                [org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences]
                                                titlebar-font='Cantarell Bold 11'


                                                Ubuntu MATE



                                                [org.gnome.desktop.interface]
                                                document-font-name='Ubuntu 11'
                                                font-name='Ubuntu 11'
                                                monospace-font-name='Ubuntu Mono 13'

                                                [org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences]
                                                titlebar-font='Ubuntu Bold 11'


                                                Once the file is saved, use this command to compile the schemas



                                                sudo glib-compile-schemas /usr/share/glib-2.0/schemas


                                                Then any of the above methods can be used to reset to the default set by you.



                                                Alternatively, if you've installed GNOME environment on Ubuntu, removed ubuntu-gnome-default-settings package to get back the ubuntu defaults. MATE's package is ubuntu-mate-default-settings. If you happen to have Ubuntu GNOME as default and installed ubuntu unity, removed ubuntu-settings package.



                                                Hope this will be helpful to some extent.






                                                share|improve this answer













                                                Though the answers are pretty upto-date and workable for GNOME3, there is one caveat and that is even when with using gsettings reset ... or gnome-tweak-tools' restore default button, you may not actually get the default fonts defined by the distribution. For example, Ubuntu (with Unity DE) comes with Ubuntu font as default interface font, but if you install another DE on top of this it can change this default settings.



                                                The values for default fonts actually come from gschema files in /usr/share/glib-2.0/schemas directory. When we install a desktop environment metapackage, it provides overrides file to change these defaults.



                                                If this kind of things happen, you need to manually revert back the default by writing a custom gschema override file.



                                                The override files for each GNOME variants



                                                For each cases, create an override file with this name /usr/share/glib-2.0/schemas/99_default_font_settings.gschema.override file and fill it with the following contents



                                                Ubuntu with Unity



                                                [org.gnome.desktop.interface]
                                                font-name="Ubuntu 11"
                                                monospace-font-name="Ubuntu Mono 13"

                                                [org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences]
                                                titlebar-font='Ubuntu Bold 11'


                                                Ubuntu with GNOME3



                                                [org.gnome.desktop.interface]
                                                font-name="Cantarell 11"
                                                monospace-font-name="Ubuntu Mono 13"

                                                [org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences]
                                                titlebar-font='Cantarell Bold 11'


                                                Ubuntu MATE



                                                [org.gnome.desktop.interface]
                                                document-font-name='Ubuntu 11'
                                                font-name='Ubuntu 11'
                                                monospace-font-name='Ubuntu Mono 13'

                                                [org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences]
                                                titlebar-font='Ubuntu Bold 11'


                                                Once the file is saved, use this command to compile the schemas



                                                sudo glib-compile-schemas /usr/share/glib-2.0/schemas


                                                Then any of the above methods can be used to reset to the default set by you.



                                                Alternatively, if you've installed GNOME environment on Ubuntu, removed ubuntu-gnome-default-settings package to get back the ubuntu defaults. MATE's package is ubuntu-mate-default-settings. If you happen to have Ubuntu GNOME as default and installed ubuntu unity, removed ubuntu-settings package.



                                                Hope this will be helpful to some extent.







                                                share|improve this answer












                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer










                                                answered Apr 20 '17 at 18:54









                                                AnwarAnwar

                                                57.2k22149255




                                                57.2k22149255























                                                    0














                                                    I refer to starkus here below - for this pretty window you need to install the package gnome-tweak-tools.




                                                    sudo apt-get install gnome-tweak-tools



                                                    sudo reboot




                                                    Then there you can set the fonts in "Schriften" resp. in "fonts".



                                                    After changed fonts-settings, then reboot again to get results system-wide.






                                                    share|improve this answer




























                                                      0














                                                      I refer to starkus here below - for this pretty window you need to install the package gnome-tweak-tools.




                                                      sudo apt-get install gnome-tweak-tools



                                                      sudo reboot




                                                      Then there you can set the fonts in "Schriften" resp. in "fonts".



                                                      After changed fonts-settings, then reboot again to get results system-wide.






                                                      share|improve this answer


























                                                        0












                                                        0








                                                        0







                                                        I refer to starkus here below - for this pretty window you need to install the package gnome-tweak-tools.




                                                        sudo apt-get install gnome-tweak-tools



                                                        sudo reboot




                                                        Then there you can set the fonts in "Schriften" resp. in "fonts".



                                                        After changed fonts-settings, then reboot again to get results system-wide.






                                                        share|improve this answer













                                                        I refer to starkus here below - for this pretty window you need to install the package gnome-tweak-tools.




                                                        sudo apt-get install gnome-tweak-tools



                                                        sudo reboot




                                                        Then there you can set the fonts in "Schriften" resp. in "fonts".



                                                        After changed fonts-settings, then reboot again to get results system-wide.







                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                        share|improve this answer










                                                        answered Apr 17 '17 at 18:23









                                                        dschinn1001dschinn1001

                                                        2,31931935




                                                        2,31931935






























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