Rob,

On Tuesday, May 26, 2026 10:45:36 AM Mountain Standard Time Rob Madole wrote:
> > On May 25, 2026, at 6:27 AM, Julian Gilbey <[email protected]> wrote:
> > 
> > What if, for example,
> > FortAwesome keeps their fonts in a database, with each record being an
> > icon in some format and its associated metadata?  (Rob: I'm not
> > fishing for information!  The details seem to be irrelevant here.)
> 
> =) I’m happy to engage in some fishing. The details may not be relevant but 
if
> they are I can help. I think it moved the conversation along the last time I
> spoke up.
> 
> I don’t mind sharing the details.
> 
> Preferred form: is actually Figma. Our designers have an entire system
> developed to manage them there. Figma is the source of truth. When we need 
to
> update an icon we have to go there to do it.
> 
> We export icons in SVG format that we then import into an internal web app
> behind our VPN. The tools we’ve used to verify SVG data, resize, convert, 
are
> all developed in-house. Even the thing that creates web font files is 
written
> in-house. (We no longer use FontForge).
> 
> We then store the raw SVG path data in a relational database.
> 
> This is probably obvious but this is all very un-friendly to what I’m 
learning
> about how DFSG works. We can’t share these internal tools because our 
company
> considers them a proprietary, competitive advantage.

Thank you for the detailed information about the upstream preferred form of 
modification.  I assume that all of what you have written above is describing 
FontAwesome, not ForkAwesome.  There has been some conflation in this 
discussion between the two, so I want to make sure that I understand you 
clearly.

-- 
Soren Stoutner
[email protected]

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