Offical MultiWorld² - Kurrac's Cryptography Code - n2
This font only uses letters (A > G) and (a > g)
This font I made in a jiffy. I thought about making a pixely font, mainly for coding, so I quickly prepared this thing.
Should I add more characters? I was thinking about adding Cyrillic, but my main idea was a font for HTML, so I only did Basic Latin and More Latin. (ANSI) If I wanted to do other characters, I could have just typed an HTML entity.
Yet I'm still stuck. Even though it is a monospace font, it could be used for writing, so it may need more characters. I don't know. Put your thoughts in the comments if you so desire.
06-03-2020: Added Cyrillic and fixed diacritical Latin characters.
Ocelot - A monospaced sans-serif font with no curves!
Narrowed version of Bytogryph code. More suitable for coding.
This is a clone of Bytogryph CodeOnly the second monospace I publish - I dislike the restriction as it just makes some glyphs look ugly no matter what you try. And don't ask me why I didn't set the spacing to mono, does it make a difference for programs or just to Fontstruct?
The alternate version of the current font which is prone/ immune to coding.
Much like Unicodes 2.0, 3.0 and 4.5, it all has the same style along to our computer age.
It may seem that this font is developed for coding, but the further improvements for this font have clearly been updated.
This is a clone of Log Sys 1This is the 7/6 block version. I've been liking this weight for programming at size 8.
Friendly Geek:
Good for...
- Labels
- Upper case
- Code
- Table cells
- Outlines
- Display
- Printing
- Informality
Not Good for...
- Normal Text
- Sentences
- Formality
Sometimes Good, Sometimes not...
- For each display screen size, one or two weights work well
I have changed the 'h' and the '+' to work better for programming. Changed the 'F' to make it more clearly different from the 'f'. Before it was looking a little bit like lower case somehow.
This is a clone of Friendly Geek