![]() ![]() You can do this in System Preferences > Keyboards. If you're asking about how to access those glyphs from the keyboard, then yes, you'll need to change the Input Source, which defines what characters you get when you press the keyboard. (Noto Sans has variants for pretty much every script ever - including Egyptian Hieroglyphs and Cuneiform! Times New Roman, STIX General, Georgia, Baskerville all have Greek characters - though they may not have the full range of diacritics.Īrial Hebrew, Corsiva Hebrew, New Penimim MT all have Hebrew characters. There are plenty of fonts with Greek and Hebrew characters already installed. In iOS you go to settings/general/keyboard/keyboards/add keyboard and add a Hebrew keyboard, and then select it using the 'globe' key. This will make the fonts available to all users on the computer. To type Hebrew, in OS X you go to system preferences/keyboard/input sources and add a Hebrew keyboard, then select it in the 'flag' menu at the top right of the finder. If it doesn't show here, hold the Alt key.Īlternatively, you can put the fonts into the Fonts folder in the root-level Library folder (at the top of the disk hierarchy). For fonts shipped only with Mac OS X 10.5, please see Apples documentation. This folder is sometimes hidden by default, but you can get to it from the Go menu in the Finder. This list of fonts contains every font shipped with Mac OS X 10.0 through macOS 10.14, including any that shipped with language-specific updates from Apple (primarily Korean and Chinese fonts). Installing a font is as easy as moving it to the Fonts folder inside your user account's Library folder. ![]()
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