opentype-shaping-documents
3270font
opentype-shaping-documents | 3270font | |
---|---|---|
2 | 13 | |
180 | 1,862 | |
2.2% | 0.8% | |
6.1 | 3.4 | |
11 days ago | 5 months ago | |
HTML | Python | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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opentype-shaping-documents
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Ligatures in programming fonts: hell no
> The tangent in (1) on how they contradict unicode could have been skipped as well
Not only because confusables already exist, but also (as I already said[1] the previous time this was posted) covering all ligatures used in all typographical styles is very much a non-goal of Unicode. The official position is that the font shaping layer[2] sits atop Unicode’s semantic representation and is free to ligate, spindle, or mutilate it for display however it prefers (at least for Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic it’s a preference; other scripts can’t be rendered at all without doing it, such as Arabic—barring the legacy presentational forms—or Burmese[3]).
The only reason Unicode even has those ligatures is that some IBM encodings (which were more presentational in nature) encoded them, and IBM employees wrote a large part of the early standard (based on the decades of i18n experience they had at that point) and wanted roundtripping.
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29639966
[2] https://github.com/n8willis/opentype-shaping-documents
[3] https://r12a.github.io/scripts/mymr/my.html#combiningV
- Libgrapheme: A simple freestanding C99 library for Unicode
3270font
- IBM Plex
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FontForge
Fontforge is the tool I used to create and what I use to maintain my 3270 font, https://github.com/rbanffy/3270font.
It has that 1990's Unix workstation vibes, but, if I didn't like vintage tech, I wouldn't make a 3270 terminal font.
- IBM 3740 Data Entry System [pdf]
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Ligatures in programming fonts: hell no
Is there a way to add programming ligatures to an existing font, similar to how Nerd Font patches existing fonts to add useful terminal glyphs like the Powerline symbols¹? I would love to have a ligatured version of that font https://github.com/rbanffy/3270font
1) the last sentence of the article implies that the author of the article abhor them as much as programming ligatures. I don't understand why but preference in taste, color, esthetic are not objective, nor absolute, so I am not the one to judge him.
- Modern Mono
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Ask HN: Those making $0/month or less on side projects – Show and tell
https://github.com/rbanffy/3270font
Being distributed with Debian and downstreams, 11 years old, with 1.5K stars and 60+ forks is, by far, my most popular open source thing. My biggest shame is that it's not software, but a font that mimics the look of IBM's 3278-2 terminals.
And, of course, it's the font I use for terminals on all my machines.
- Programming Fonts
- GitHub - rbanffy/3270font: A 3270 font in a modern format
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MonoLisa – A Font Designed for Developers
Sorry, but no IDE comes with a proper 3278-like font. Not even IBM's Developer for z/OS comes with one (they commissioned that other font called Plex... who would take seriously a font named after a media player?).
Luckily, everyone can get one at https://github.com/rbanffy/3270font.
Note: shameless plug ;-)
- Thousands of Debian packages updated from their upstream Git repository
What are some alternatives?
fonttools-opentype-feature-freezer - OTFeatureFreezer GUI app and pyftfeatfreeze commandline tool in Python to permanently "apply" OpenType features to fonts, by remapping their Unicode assignments
comic-shanns - a classy font
fbpdf - A small framebuffer pdf, djvu, epub, xps, and cbz viewer
Mailspring-Libre - (archived) Mailspring Libre build – aiming at removing Mailspring's dependecy on a central server
utf8proc - a clean C library for processing UTF-8 Unicode data
quick-look-plugins - List of useful Quick Look plugins for developers