Adopted by Mozilla for the Firefox for Android browser, Clear Sans has been
recognized as a versatile OpenType font for screen, print, and Web. Clear
Sans was designed with on-screen legibility in mind. It strikes a balance
between contemporary, professional, and stylish expression and thoroughly
functional purpose. It has a sophisticated and elegant personality at all
sizes, and its thoughtful design becomes even more evident at the thin
weight.
It has minimized, unambiguous characters and slightly narrow proportions,
making it ideal for UI design. Its strong, recognizable forms avoid
distracting ambiguity, making Clear Sans comfortable for reading short UI
labels and long passages in both screen and print.
This font supports a wide range of languages using Latin, Cyrillic, and
Greek scripts. The font family includes medium, regular, thin, and light
weights with upright, italic, and bold styles.
ok sthen@
VLGothic and VLPGothic are a Japanese TrueType font family from Vine Linux.
It consists of kanji, kana and alphanumeric characters from the M+ fonts;
some kanji from the Sazanami Gothic font; and remaining kanji produced by
Daisuke Suzuki of Project Vine.
From Sasano Takayoshi (thanks!). ok sthen@
From Giuseppe Cocomazzi <sbudella AT gmail DOT com>, who takes MAINTAINER,
thanks!
ok ian@
Adrian Smith's standard fonts for the APL language.
The package includes APL385, a monospaced font developed with all APL software
vendors in the late 1980s, and APL333, a non-monospaced version of the same
font.
the input files it triggers a high-cpu loop, which stays running even after
dpb kills the build due to timeout. (This is already marked BROKEN on macppc
and sparc64).
A family of high-quality WGL4 TrueType fonts, created by the Bigelow &
Holmes type foundry specifically for the Go project.
The font family, called Go (naturally), includes proportional and
fixed-width faces in normal, bold, and italic renderings. The fonts have
been tested for technical uses, particularly programming. Go source code
looks particularly good when displayed in Go fonts, as its name implies,
with things like punctuation characters easily distinguishable and
operators lined up and placed consistently.
ok jturner@ on an earlier version, feedback and ok juanfra@