source-han-sans
London-Underground-Dot-Matrix-Typeface
source-han-sans | London-Underground-Dot-Matrix-Typeface | |
---|---|---|
5 | 6 | |
13,548 | 1,504 | |
0.0% | - | |
0.0 | 2.1 | |
almost 2 years ago | 23 days ago | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | - |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
source-han-sans
-
"Simplified" vs "Traditional" vs "Hong Kong" glyphs
Moreover, I see a roughly 50/50 split of the glyph standard in traditional Chinese texts; it is not uncommon for "Jiu Zixing" and Taiwan MOE styles to appear on the same page. The HK version (middle) is a recent addition per the "Splitting TWHK into TW & HK" issue on GitHub. I have never seen any print text following the HK standard, though you may see them occasionally in online media due to preinstalled HK fonts such as PingFang or Noto Sans.
-
What to do when device (phone, PC, etc) doesn’t display the character and only show stacked lines like this?
Babelstone Han or [Source Han Sans](https://github.com/adobe-fonts/source-han-sans} are probably your best bets? Couldn't find any other typefaces that might cover obscure characters like these
-
First time saw it printed, but I think it's an image? From a magazine of recent date.
Try Source Han fonts (https://github.com/adobe-fonts/source-han-sans or https://github.com/adobe-fonts/source-han-serif) from Google/Adobe. It's the default font on Android and should display it wonderfully: 𰻝 (simplified) or 𰻞 (traditional).
-
MacType: Better Font Rendering for Windows
I believe Windows's approach is localisation not globalisation. Many programmes runs properly only in designed locales, not that programmes run well in any locale.
Chinese/Korean rendered incorrectly on English UI because system hardcoded a font fallback, which put Japanese font first, regardless of how languages are ordered in the Settings. This is largely true for traditional Win32 programmes, like Chrome, Edge, Explorer.exe, etc. However UWP apps using the new UI framework (like Unigram, Intel Command Centre etc) behave correctly if setting Chinese/Korean as secondary language.
It's different on macOS or iOS however, if you set a system locale order as 1. English, 2. Chinese, then Chinese content will render correctly with correct Chinese system font PingFang.
Another issue that is also very important is that Chinese (Simplified or Traditional), Korean and Japanese share amount of the same characters but written differently. That means system must render the glyph in correct variant, like in the example of Source Han Sans
https://github.com/adobe-fonts/source-han-sans/raw/release/S...
-
Why are 关 and 复 half-width in japanese?
According to people from adobe its even a JIS standard to make those two kanji narrower
London-Underground-Dot-Matrix-Typeface
What are some alternatives?
opentype.js - Read and write OpenType fonts using JavaScript.
Minecraft-Mono - A programming font based on the typeface used in Minecraft [Moved to: https://github.com/IdreesInc/Monocraft]
mactype - Better font rendering for Windows.
vbz-fahrgastinformation
source-code-pro - Monospaced font family for user interface and coding environments
awesome-design - 🌟 Curated design resources from all over the world.
operator-mono-font
mona-sans - Mona Sans, a variable font from GitHub
erfan-font - قلم پیکسلی فارسی عرفان. erfan pixel Persian/Arabic font
cmd - C# library to run external programs in a simpler way. Demonstration of "dynamic" features of C#.
Warcraft-Font-Merger - Warcraft Font Merger,魔兽世界字体合并/补全工具。
chiron-sans-hk - 昭源黑體:現代筆形風格,平衡標準字形和印刷體慣用筆形的免費開源黑體字型