A great way to increase the Unicode coverage of your favorite programming font.
monospacifier.py
adjusts every character of your favorite variable-width font to match a reference monospace font. The result is a good fallback font for characters not covered by the reference: the result is a font setup with good Unicode coverage, without breaking indentation.
Instead of running this program, you can use one of the pre-generated monospace fonts listed below (to be use as a fallback, for symbols not covered by your favorite font).
Choose from this list, based on your main programming font. Note that some fonts needed to be renamed to comply with their licenses (Asana → Asanb, STIX → STIY).
If your favorite combination is not available, please let me know.
- On Windows put the font in
C:\Windows\Font
. - On Debian-inspired systems put the font in
~/.fonts
and runfc-cache
.
Add the following snippet to your .emacs
(replacing font names as appropriate), then restart:
(dolist (ft (fontset-list))
(set-fontset-font ft 'unicode (font-spec :name "<monospace font>"))
(set-fontset-font ft 'unicode (font-spec :name "<variable-width font> monospacified for <monospace font>") nil 'append))
Here are two examples:
(dolist (ft (fontset-list))
(set-fontset-font ft 'unicode (font-spec :name "Consolas"))
(set-fontset-font ft 'unicode (font-spec :name "Symbola monospacified for Consolas") nil 'append))
(dolist (ft (fontset-list))
(set-fontset-font ft 'unicode (font-spec :name "DejaVu Sans Mono"))
(set-fontset-font ft 'unicode (font-spec :name "Asanb Math monospacified for DejaVu Sans Mono") nil 'append))
Fallback fonts can be used with urxvt
using comma-separated values to the -fn
switch:
urxvt -fn 'xft:Consolas,xft:Symbola monospacified for Consolas'
This can also be set in the .Xresources
file:
URxvt.font: xft:Consolas,xft:Symbola monospacified for Consolas
Source it by running xrdb -merge .Xresources
.
Please submit recipes for other editors or operating systems!
Monospace font + default fallbacks — Monospace font + original Symbola — Monospace font + Monospacified Symbola
- For help, run
./monospacifier.py -h
- For examples of use, see the Makefile (I use it to generate the files listed here)
monospacifier.py
includes multiple scaling algorithms (only one is exposed on the CLI). They are all rather basic, so don't expect this program to create anything except a decent fallback font.
The most advanced algorithm (demoed) sets the bounding box of each glyph appropriately (to match the most common width in the monospace font), and slightly compresses wide characters to reduce bleeding (wide glyphs will overlap with neighboring characters), while preserving distinctions between long and short glyphs (so ↦ and ⟼ are still distinguishable). Then (conditional on the --copy-metrics
flag), monospacifier.py
adjusts the metrics of the newly created font to match those of the reference (this fixes a number of issues that I don't understand well, in particular with hhea_descent
and os2_typodescent
metrics; if you have a clue about this, please do get in touch by opening an issue).