Started coding at the age of 13, now a professional software engineer and Scrum Master, creating and maintaining enterprise solutions. Eat - Sleep - Code - Lift - Repeat 💪🏾
The easiest way would be if you have a backup of your /etc/fonts/local.conf file or didn't had this file at all before!
In that case, either restore the backup file or delete the /etc/fonts/local.conf file completely and run fc-cache.
In case you have no backup and had customizations in that file before, open it with an editor and remove all lines containing the emoji font (in this case e.g. Noto...). Save and run fc-cache.
Started coding at the age of 13, now a professional software engineer and Scrum Master, creating and maintaining enterprise solutions. Eat - Sleep - Code - Lift - Repeat 💪🏾
Started coding at the age of 13, now a professional software engineer and Scrum Master, creating and maintaining enterprise solutions. Eat - Sleep - Code - Lift - Repeat 💪🏾
The easiest way would be if you have a backup of your
/etc/fonts/local.conf
file or didn't had this file at all before!In that case, either restore the backup file or delete the
/etc/fonts/local.conf
file completely and runfc-cache
.In case you have no backup and had customizations in that file before, open it with an editor and remove all lines containing the emoji font (in this case e.g.
Noto...
). Save and runfc-cache
.Oh, thanks!
you're welcome ☺️ Did it work?
Worked perfectly!
Nice 👍