UW ttyp0 is a family of bitmap programmer's fonts. It covers most of the Latin
and Cyrillic alphabet, Greek, Armenian, Georgian (only Mkhedruli), Hebrew
(without cantillation marks), Thai, most of IPA (but no UPA), standard
punctuation, common symbols, some mathematics, line graphics, a few dingbats,
and Powerline delimiter symbols.
ok sthen@, Manuel Giraud (who ported the same font) is also fine with it.
The new structure is required for switching to TTC fonts, but it will also make
adding different Iosevka variants easier.
bentely@ convinced me to drop the -fonts suffix on the PKGNAME as it's
redundant and isn't part of the project's actual name.
OK bentley@, thanks!
Literata is a contemporary serif typeface family, intended for long-form
reading especially in eBooks. It was commisioned for exclusive use by
Google Play Books in 2014, and released under the SIL Open Font License
for everyone in January 2019 with a Variable Font "Weight" axis.
The Literata project was commissioned by Google from TypeTogether, an
international type design foundry.
ok kmos@
Google, having their priorities entirely in order, regularly tags
releases of Noto Emoji, and rarely bothers creating releases of Noto's
other less important Unicode ranges.
Webfonts are only useful to serve over the web. On OpenBSD, where
/var/www is on a different partition from /usr/local and not visible
from chroot, there's no way for pkg_add to keep these files up to date
once they've been copied to a webserver.
Maybe we'll install webfonts to /var/www in the future. Whether we do or
not, installing them to /usr/local as we do now won't help.
ok sthen@ pamela@ rsadowski@
ok bentley@
Cascadia Code is a monospaced font that includes programming ligatures
and is designed to enhance the modern look and feel of the terminal.