The old Morse code inspires many. I'm sorry to tell you, but you are not the first with this idea. However, you could have surpassed all previous incarnations of Morse code by simply doing some research and paying more attention to details.
You could have followed the international standards: short mark (dot) is one unit long, longer mark (dash) is three units long, intra character gap (between the dots and dashes of the same character) is one unit long, short gap (between letters) is three units long, and medium gap (between words) is seven (!) units long, so on and so forth. The simple code is not so simple after all.
Having successfully completed the font, some short description mentioning suggested use might not be completely out of place. No rating given this time.
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You could have followed the international standards: short mark (dot) is one unit long, longer mark (dash) is three units long, intra character gap (between the dots and dashes of the same character) is one unit long, short gap (between letters) is three units long, and medium gap (between words) is seven (!) units long, so on and so forth. The simple code is not so simple after all.
Having successfully completed the font, some short description mentioning suggested use might not be completely out of place. No rating given this time.
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