Unifont 10.0.01 has just been released, on the same day that Unicode 10.0.0
was formally released.

Unifont provides fonts with a glyph for each printable code point in the
Unicode Basic Multilingual Plane, as well as wide coverage of the
Supplemental Multilingual Plane and some ConScript Unicode Registry glyphs.

The Unifont package includes TrueType fonts for all of these ranges, and
BDF and PCF fonts for the Unicode Basic Multilingual Plane.  There is also
a specialized PSF font for using GNU APL in console mode on GNU/Linux
systems.

The web page for this project is https://savannah.gnu.org/projects/unifont/.

You can download the latest version from GNU mirror sites, accessible at
http://ftpmirror.gnu.org/unifont/unifont-10.0.01.  If the mirror site does
not contain this latest version, you can download files directly from GNU
at ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/unifont/unifont-10.0.01/.

This release posed a new challenge: new Chinese ideographs in the BMP to
represent Orthodox Church Slavonic comprised of two fairly complex Chinese
ideographs.  The high number of strokes in these additions required
adopting unihex2bmp, unibmp2hex, and unifontpic to work with
quadruple-width glyphs.

The unihex2bmp and unibmp2hex utilities now provide round-trip conversion
between ".hex" and ".bmp" Unifont formats for quadruple-width glyphs.  The
unifontpic utility compresses triple-width and quadruple-width glyphs by 50
percent.  This was not ideal, but was the most practical solution to keep
the picture size a manageable size of less than one meter square.  The
unihex2png and unipng2hex utilities do not support these wider glyphs at
this point.

There were also many changes to glyphs from the previous version.  See the
ChangeLog file in the main tarball for details.

Sincerely,


Paul Hardy
GNU Unifont Maintainer
-- 
If you have a working or partly working program that you'd like
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