A strong and rounded fixed-width font, aimed at single-font apps such as consoles and text editors. Good for programming and text interface design. Has more glyphs and complete Unicode subsets than most default monospaced fonts.
NOTE: If you want to use this font in Windows console apps, please do NOT download it from here because this website is unable to mark TTF font files as Monospaced, in the way that Windows requires. Instead, read the comments below for 22nd May 2019 and download it from the link provided.
This is a cloneFinished! (Took me 3 days)
Private use characters are encoded in Variation Selectors and Latin Ext. D.
(Inspied by The TI-92 Font)
An extension of Computer Says No by Christian Munk.
This is a clone of Computer says noAdjustment to the excellent 'Computer Says No' for my own preferences.
Play with FontForge to get proper size.
This is a clone of Computer says noLet's see how many glyphs can be in a font without ULS
The answer: 2902
mono 7x11 pixel font
times ive downloaded this font: 9
Not finished yet. Still have greek, Cyrillic, and other characters used in retro computing to do.
7-segment display and characters to create arbitrary fractions can be found in the Private use Area.
Note that some characters extend slightly beyond the 16x16 grid to conserve character space in the font
A font perfect for a pixel-based game. Also includes box drawing and block symbols.
Aso see this font by Patrick H. Lauke and this font from Goatmeal, which has some similar letters this font. I made this font in the final days of Everybody Edits, although the letters in the (probably lost now) world have some details that are different from this font.
This font has been expanded to cover CP437, along with (some) legacy symbols.
I still wish we can create a custom .notdef character so we don't have to have the default one on downloaded fonts without having to use FontForge or Glyphs to change it.
Based on Anypix 7x5 Unicode.
Done:
Basic Latin, More Latin, Extended Latin A, Extended Latin B, Greek and Coptic, Cyrillic, Arabic, Devanagari, Hebrew, Katakana, Thai, Georgian, Armenian, Bopomofo, Hiragana, Bengali, Gurmukhi, Gujarati, Sinhala, Even More Latin, Google Fonts Basic
Working on:
Telugu, Tamil, Malayalam
(The reason why I am not doing Hangul is because 7x7 is too small for most of the letters. Once I get around to VCR-14, I will do Hangul and (hopefully) the rest of Plane 0.)