This is what I have found out.
First I tried to compare Mag5 and Mag8 to see whether there were some font files I could copy from Mag5 and install on Mag8. But I found nothing.
Further search shows that fonts in Mag8 is quite similar to other contemporary Linux distributions.
The missing fonts are eg explained in
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+sour ... ug/1758632Therefore TTF versions of the 35 standard PostScript font has been made available. In MCC software installation it is the fonts-ttf-urw - The 35 standard True Type fonts
The font decription has been improved over time and for some reasons the font names has changed.
Some information based on
http://luc.devroye.org/fonts-97589.html and somewhere about : URW-base35 – URW "Base 35" font pack for LaTex
In summary :
Century Schoolbook = New Century Schoolbook = C059
Dingbats = Zapf Dingbats = D050000L
Nimbus Mono L = Courier = Courier New
Nimbus Roman No9 L = Nimbus Roman = Times = (Times New Roman ?)
Nimbus Sans L = Nimbus Sans Narrow = Helvetica
Standard Symbols L = Symbol
URW Bookman
URW Chancery L Medium Italic = Zapf Chancery = Z003 (=Zapf Calligraphic)
URW Gothic L Book = Avant Garde = URW Gothic
URW Palladio L = Palatino = P052
Some information about C059 and P052 can be found in :
https://blogfonts.com/c059.font and
https://blogfonts.com/p052.fontIt seems that Type1 is on its way to become obsolete, and OTF is a better replacement than TTF .
But still, even though the new Opentype fonts looks identical to the old Type1 fonts there is a difference in the amount of "head-space" so there is a bigger line distance (line hight) in the type1 fonts.
That may be the reason why LibreOffice Writer "Text body"-Style has Line Spacing set to 1.15 lines which is a predefined value.
To me TTF-fonts look nice and of good quality but Adobes type1 fonts look more professional with the bigger spacing.
So that explaines the Core 35 fonts. I was still missing Bitstream Charter which I found and downloaded from
https://github.com/peplow/Bitstream-Charter .
Regards.