Junicode-font
Iosevka
Junicode-font | Iosevka | |
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8 | 84 | |
363 | 18,432 | |
- | - | |
9.1 | 9.7 | |
about 2 months ago | 6 days ago | |
HTML | JavaScript | |
SIL Open Font License 1.1 | SIL Open Font License 1.1 |
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Junicode-font
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Mixing Serif Typefaces?
One thing came to mind for a Bembo-like typeface that supports medieval glyphs is Junicode. It has all of the four and even has an alt look for eth, thorn, and yogh. Test them here.
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What are some good fonts similar to IM Fell English? (I'm looking for a font with an old-timey feel, like it's written on a scroll, with fantasy/D&D vibes, but still very readable)
Junicode -- for Medievalists!!
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HELP I can't "write" a phonetic symbol I need
You could try Junicode The font aims to have a lot of these niche unencoded glyphs in it for use when Unicode compliment fonts are lacking. Even if that character is not currently in the font, you could make a request for it. Admittedly there appears to be a development hiatus at the moment, but if you can wait then it would be the best looking option.
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Any idea how to make these? also for the one that has 2 accent marks its suppose to be - and not _ while the one next to the o is suppose to be _ (sorry for not making that clear.
An important thing to note is that Unicode may not be able to cover everything you come across. Thankfully, though, there are resources for people in your situation. The Medieval Unicode Font Initiative is the central authority on allocating private use area code points to get some standardization in the presentation of nonstandard glyphs. It will require a specialized font to work, and won’t be the most portable, though. If you are willing to stray further from standard, I’d highly recommend checking out Junicode 2. It’s a singular font which further builds off of MUFI efforts, creating more or less it’s own standard, but also has features to keep documents from becoming unusable in the case that the font can’t be transferred alongside the text. What’s more, the font is under active development and accepting new glyph requests. While it may take some time to get the new glyphs you need added, considering the whole thing is being made by one person for free, I’d say it’s a pretty good deal.
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Unicode 15.0 was released, adding 4,489 characters!
From what I recall, they stopped creating precomposed glyphs with diacritics shortly after the mess that was polytonic Greek. It should become abundantly clear why if you look at the code charts. Anyways, font authors can adjust diacritics to make them look as good as a precomposed glyph (or even just have custom precomposed glyph ligatures). If you can find historical reason for such a glyph being used then putting a request in at the Junicode font github would likely be your best bet to have as good a representation for it as possible in a font.
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Can someone help me find the Combining Double Inverted Breve with an accent mark?
This should technically be supported by Uode, but you will need either a really good font or to do some tweaking. Even the great Junicode, which is ideal for most combining mark related work. For a proper solution, you can submit an issue about the acute anchor position when combined with double combining marks. In the meantime, if you are forced to used plaintext, the best possible is (ú͡ọ). How ugly it looks will depend largely on what fonts and rendering engine is involved, but it is guaranteed to not look great. For a better, albeit still hacky solution, if you use LuaTeX, the following should both work. (u\char"0361\raisebox{0.5ex}{\char"0301}o\char"0323) (u\char"0361{\hidewidth\kern.15em\raisebox{0.5ex}{\char"0301}\hidewidth}o\char"0323) The first one is simpler, while the second one includes a slight offset for italic correction. It may not be perfect, but it works.
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Favorite open source fonts?
Junicode (formerly JuniusX) is straight amazing. Currently developing on variable font it seems.
- Junicode: A MUFI-compliant medieval character font
Iosevka
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Git Things
> 80 should be fine for most single lines of good code in most languages.
C++ with even a modest template will flow over 80 without much effort.
I'm now using the condensed width font Iosevka font [1] with 160 chars as my max width in clang-format and indents at 1.
After a few days of using it, I'm converted. It was a bit odd looking at first, but I guess that's brain plasticity at work.
1. https://github.com/be5invis/Iosevka/releases
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Name the font, please
iosevka
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which Font do you use?
https://github.com/be5invis/Iosevka is the best
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Monaspace
Sadly I think that because of that flag it does not enable ligatures.
I was able to see ligatures and text healing in vim running in a patched st* though. I really like it thanks! The text healing only moves the line subtly as I type and when I cursor over there are no droppings from the widened 'm' for example. It's well thought-out for code.
If I could ask for a feature it would be to select some variants, like angular 0 with reverse slash or to leave the ! in the != ligature. To see what I mean: https://github.com/be5invis/Iosevka/blob/main/doc/stylistic-...
* https://st.suckless.org/patches/ligatures/
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I had no idea that one company basically owns every font
Iosevka is a fantastic open-source font that's fully customizable. I have replaced the fixed font on all of my devices and apps to a custom Iosevka build I made, and I don't think I'll ever turn back.
https://github.com/be5invis/Iosevka
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Unicode Character “𝕏” (U+1D54F)
Misremembered about Iosevka: I requested support for a few other BQN characters after noticing it already had the double-struck ones (https://github.com/be5invis/Iosevka/issues/870). The other three were requests or contributions (drew 3270's 𝕏 myself!) explicitly in connection with BQN.
- Iosevka typeface for code, from code
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JetBrains Mono Typeface
Nothing beats Iosevka (https://github.com/be5invis/Iosevka) for me. It's narrow yet super readable, making great use of screen real estate. Lots of customization, ligatures, weights, and a nerd font patch for terminal.
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Iosevka typeface for code, from code. Has styles like Fira Mono, Consolas, Menlo
> Monospace Iosevka contains various stylistic sets to change the shape of certain characters
That's what's on display at the linked URL (if anyone else was confused)
You can also select variants for specific characters: https://github.com/be5invis/Iosevka/blob/main/doc/character-...
What are some alternatives?
bmono - 🏷️ Mono font that SuperB
nerd-fonts - Iconic font aggregator, collection, & patcher. 3,600+ icons, 50+ patched fonts: Hack, Source Code Pro, more. Glyph collections: Font Awesome, Material Design Icons, Octicons, & more
vscode-lean - Extension for VS Code that provides support for the older Lean 3 language. Succeeded by vscode-lean4 ('lean4' in the extensions menu) for the Lean 4 language.
cascadia-code - This is a fun, new monospaced font that includes programming ligatures and is designed to enhance the modern look and feel of the Windows Terminal.
JetBrainsMonoSlashed - JetBrains Mono Slashed – the free and open-source typeface for developers, now with slashed zero
JetBrainsMono - JetBrains Mono – the free and open-source typeface for developers
Hack - A typeface designed for source code
FiraCode - Free monospaced font with programming ligatures
victor-mono - A free programming font with cursive italics and ligatures. Donations welcome ❤️
Sarasa-Gothic - Sarasa Gothic / 更纱黑体 / 更紗黑體 / 更紗ゴシック / 사라사 고딕
vim-dim - Dim (/dɪm/; a contraction of Default IMproved) is a clone of Vim’s default colorscheme, with some improvements.
nvim-treesitter - Nvim Treesitter configurations and abstraction layer