From 733626c52b3ab7ba8de3d341c4f96a7d491cfe34 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Ian Channing Date: Mon, 18 Jun 2018 13:34:06 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] fixed grammar --- ...es-Guide-to-Powerline-fonts-on-Fedora,-Ubuntu-and-Windows.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/Dummies-Guide-to-Powerline-fonts-on-Fedora,-Ubuntu-and-Windows.md b/Dummies-Guide-to-Powerline-fonts-on-Fedora,-Ubuntu-and-Windows.md index d3be69b..b5a959e 100644 --- a/Dummies-Guide-to-Powerline-fonts-on-Fedora,-Ubuntu-and-Windows.md +++ b/Dummies-Guide-to-Powerline-fonts-on-Fedora,-Ubuntu-and-Windows.md @@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ Also the nice thing is that you can set your DOS/Powershell prompt to the same f ## Tweaking -Once I actually got it working for the first time, it was really disappointing as the icons didn't fully match up. But as per the [FAQ][4] we need to do some tweaking. I started of with Inconsolata as this gives me a consistent font across Windows and Linux. You can install the general font easily on Ubuntu with `apt install fonts-inconsolata` This is what I got: +Once I actually got it working for the first time, it was really disappointing as the icons didn't fully match up. But as per the [FAQ][4] we need to do some tweaking. I started off with Inconsolata as this gives me a consistent font across Windows and Linux. You can install the general font easily on Ubuntu with `apt install fonts-inconsolata` This is what I got: [![enter image description here][5]][5]