Got the inspiration for this one from a Scania L94UB bus with a route information screen. The one I came across displayed “Leighton Buzzard” in this dotted font. Those letters were the starting point, but weren’t kept exactly the same as they were on that screen.
Welcome to Orwellian Barcode Prison, antithesis of Chicken Wire. The only thing to do here is squint.
The default font used by Adafruit's GFX library. The hex codes correspond to the cp437(true) chart on page 16:
https://cdn-learn.adafruit.com/downloads/pdf/adafruit-gfx-graphics-library.pdf
Hex codes with bit[0] = 0, 1, 8, 9 were unavailable, so bit[2] is set as 1.
(Ex: 0x0001 => 0x0101)
Millions of people with Irish heritage across the globe today celebrate St. Patrick's Day. The country's patron saint introduced Christianity to Ireland around 432 CE, and his passing on March 17, 461 CE, became a day of commemoration in his homeland.
The holiday holds cultural significance in Canada especially in cities where people who claim Irish ancestry reside like, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and Quebec. The country's first St. Patrick's Day parade was held in 1824 in Montreal. The modern celebration typically includes parades, traditional Irish music and dance performances, wearing green clothes and indulging in Irish cuisine and beverages. Have you pinned a shamrock to your jacket yet?
please clone this if you want to extend this.
NEW UPDATE!!!: added more latin fixed 0-9 and added greek
This is an alphabet for Kakaluʒi. All letters are in their corresponding Latin letters, except zʒ, which is in cʼs spot.
For Yellow Candy 8432. https://fontstruct.com/fontstructors/2253156/yellow-candy-8432
Q and q are placeholders.
KƷ’s ISO 639 codes are kz and qzh.
In this alphabet, 3 cannot be used as a placeholder for ʒ.