Hi,
I've tried groff-ifying the Unifont, in the same way I do it with the
Tinos font. However, I've had a few problems.
Here's the Tinos font that's packaged with Debian:
$ apt-file find tinos | grep ttf
texlive-fonts-extra-links:
/usr/share/texlive/texmf-dist/fonts/truetype/go
Hi Alex,
At 2024-04-20T14:26:17+0200, Alejandro Colomar wrote:
> First problem:
>
> In the Unifont, I don't see a "Regular" font. I assumed I should take
> the unifont.otf file.
Since (I believe I saw you say that) you're using GNU Unifont only to
patch up missing code point coverage from other
On 2024-04-20 09:52, G. Branden Robinson wrote:
At 2024-04-20T14:26:17+0200, Alejandro Colomar wrote:
First problem:
In the Unifont, I don't see a "Regular" font. I assumed I should take
the unifont.otf file.
Hi folks,
That's the BMP ~63.5k characters ~57k glyphs; unifont_upper are the SMP
Hi Branden,
On Sat, Apr 20, 2024 at 10:52:31AM -0500, G. Branden Robinson wrote:
> Since (I believe I saw you say that) you're using GNU Unifont only to
> patch up missing code point coverage from other fonts, in your
> application it probably makes sense to specify it as a "special" font.
>
> af
Hi Brian,
On Sat, Apr 20, 2024 at 02:11:55PM -0600, Brian Inglis wrote:
> On 2024-04-20 09:52, G. Branden Robinson wrote:
> > At 2024-04-20T14:26:17+0200, Alejandro Colomar wrote:
> > > First problem:
> > >
> > > In the Unifont, I don't see a "Regular" font. I assumed I should take
> > > the uni
On Sat, Apr 20, 2024 at 5:21 PM Alejandro Colomar wrote:
> > It does occur
> > to me that we might enhance afmtodit make of use of it as the
> > default "spacewidth".
>
> That sounds like a great idea.
Would you be willing to open a savannah request for this feature?
https://savannah.gn