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Link to original content: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iosevka
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Iosevka

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Iosevka
CategoryMonospaced font family
Classification
Designer(s)Belleve Invis
Date created2015
Date released19 July 2015
LicenseSIL Open Font License
Design based onPragmataPro, PF DIN Mono, M+
Websitetypeof.net/Iosevka/
Latest release version32.1.0 (17 November 2024)[1]

Iosevka (IPA: [ˌjɔˈseβ.kʰa])[2] is a monospace programming typeface, built declaratively using custom typeface generation software, and with an emphasis on compatibility with CJK characters.[3] It is available under a FOSS license. The default builds are available in two styles of nine weights each, and come with italic and oblique versions. The typeface was designed to be easily configurable by editing textual TOML configuration files in the custom generation software.

The character repertoire covers a significant portion of the Basic Multilingual Plane of Unicode, and a few characters from the Enclosed Alphanumeric Supplement block.

History

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The first version of Iosevka, then named codexHW, was created on 19 July 2015,[4] and renamed to Iosevka three days later.[5] It is the product of Chinese typographer Renzhi Li, using the Romanised pseudonym Belleve Invis.[6]

Features

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Iosevka once was a condensed font only, suitable to use with double width CJK characters, using a slashed zero by default. It contains many ligatures, especially suited towards functional programming languages such as Coq, Idris, and Haskell. The variant Iosevka Term is designed to better support terminals and the variant Iosevka Fixed omits the ligatures. It also comes with OpenType features including stylistic sets and character variants.

A second width variant (named Extended) expands all glyphs to easier readable proportions (7 by 10), and also proportionally spaced font variants are included now. Notably, all variants of the Iosevka font family cover the same set of 5013 unicode character points, plus 4 long arrows which do not belong to all variants.

Build process

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One major characteristic of Iosevka is that it is generated from declarative data files using a multi-phase build process.[7] It was originally created as a typeface that could be used with a package called node-sfnt:

As I maintaining node-sfnt, a low-level library used to parse and generate TTFs in Node.JS, I decided to make a programming font using it. Iosevka is generated from a program written by me, as well as a set of parameters, pretty like Computer Modern, but in a more modern way. [...] [C]reating a font actually needs a domain-specific language, like Knuth's METAFONT language. With PatEL's macro system I can easily turn PatEL into a DSL while remaining its full ability of programming. The PatEL is in another repository I created, though not documented yet. It's [sic] syntax is basically a Lisp with improvements reducing brackets (by using colons and indents), and supporting infix operators.[8]

As of 2018, the data files are still written in the Patrisika Example Language, also known as PatEL.[9] PatEL is an alternative s-expression format somewhat akin to the wisp of SRFI 119.[10] The PatEL data is then converted into SpiderMonkey abstract syntax tree using another library called Patrisika.[11] The abstract syntax tree is then converted into JavaScript using Escodegen.[12]

See also

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  • PragmataPro, a monospaced font with a design similar to Iosevka

References

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  1. ^ "Release 32.1.0". 17 November 2024. Retrieved 23 November 2024.
  2. ^ How to pronounce "Iosevka"?
  3. ^ "Because I and many of my friends live in China and Japan, I decided to make my font exactly half-width, to be compatible with Han Characters (exactly 1em wide)." — A programming typeface
    "Do you know that all letters in Iosevka are EXACTLY 1/2 em wide? For ASIAN users, you can use THIS and preserve your perfect alignment." — be5invis
  4. ^ Created in commit 075cd395d1457e69
  5. ^ The name was changed in commit 3326d7ab3704fd29
  6. ^ typeof.net
  7. ^ Comment by the author
  8. ^ A programming typeface
  9. ^ PatEL
  10. ^ SRFI 119
  11. ^ Patrisika
  12. ^ Escodegen
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