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On Thu, Jul 23, 2020, at 6:27 AM, Lucio De Re wrote:
>
> It does mean that acme needs some way to extend its grasp of
> delimiters into the extended fonts.
How about just masking off the top few bits when checking for delimiters? Not
really a clean solution, but certainly simple. It would mean
On 7/22/20, Russ Cox wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 21, 2020 at 7:22 PM Anthony Martin wrote:
>
>> Russ, what did you do to that poor little Acme?! ☺
>>
>> Did you take the less daunting route using
>>
>> - a combined font file with shapes for normal, italic, bold, etc. and
>> - a filter to offset runes
I see, yes. Well, that's not too terrible.
-rob
On Thu, Jul 23, 2020 at 1:40 PM wrote:
> > I don't understand that. Acme knows the characters' location or it
> couldn't
> > draw them. Are you sure it's not just the frame library's lousy handling
> of
> > italic fonts?
>
> Unless I'm
> I don't understand that. Acme knows the characters' location or it couldn't
> draw them. Are you sure it's not just the frame library's lousy handling of
> italic fonts?
Unless I'm misunderstanding how this works, ',' (0x2c) gets mangled
to something like 0x10002c.
So, acme knows the location,
>
> *You can tell because when I double-click on the modified text acme
> doesn't know where the word boundaries are and ends up highlighting across
> punctuation that it normally wouldn't.*
I don't understand that. Acme knows the characters' location or it couldn't
draw them. Are you sure it's
[cc -golang-nuts, +9fans]
> io/fs draft design
> - Video: https://golang.org/s/draft-iofs-video
Russ, what did you do to that poor little Acme?! ☺
Did you take the less daunting route using
- a combined font file with shapes for normal, italic, bold, etc. and
- a filter to offset runes into
Okay that explains a lot. I've had trouble with acme on Mac 10.7 and 10.8
On Dec 11, 2013 1:17 PM, erik quanstrom quans...@labs.coraid.com wrote:
I am running plan9port on my Mac, not Plan-9 or Inferno so there is no
fontsrv. I can, however, run:
fontsrv only exists in plan9port.
- erik
still a bit pixilated
1 bit fonts are legible. this is a feature.
sl
On 2013-12-11 19:45 , Blake McBride wrote:
The problem is that the fonts are low-res and pixilated (when compared
to almost any other program on the Mac). (I think I saw the same
problem under Linux.)
You can turn the pixilation in the advantage by using Terminus font -
one of my favorites
When I installed p9ports in my new Macbook Air (around 4 months ago),
fontsrv didn't compile out of the box, I had to compile it separately.
For me all available fonts read perfectly well and sharp (Mac OS X 10.9 on
Air 13 and Mac OS X 10.6.8 on Macbook 13)
Regards,
Ruben
On Wed, Dec 11, 2013
I checked. fontsrv didn't compile. I'm sure I can get it to compile but I
don't see the point. Acme comes up, I can change fonts, etc.. What will
fontsrv buy me?
Incidentally, when I look on the net at picture or videos of acme, the
fonts they show on all of those are pixilated too. See:
Check here:
https://vimeo.com/64487176
The slight pixelation comes from the video compression. The font is Monaco,
on my old Macbook
How are you exactly changing fonts, though?
On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 8:50 PM, Blake McBride bl...@mcbride.name wrote:
I checked. fontsrv didn't compile. I'm
Your font does look better than what I have (but not perfect).
Monaco didn't come with 9p9. Where did you get that?
I am changing font via the Acme Font command on the tag line; i.e.
Font /usr/local/plan9port/font/fixed/unicode.9x15B.font
It is changing the font. The change is obvious.
Those look like mine. Obviously it is highly usable, but the fonts shown
are pixilated and not smooth like fonts that come with the Mac, Linux, etc.
It's a matter of taste, but I prefer the sharpness of the 1 bit fonts. The gray,
fuzzy stuff eventually takes a toll on my eyes.
sl
It's a matter of taste, but I prefer the sharpness of the 1 bit fonts. The
gray,
fuzzy stuff eventually takes a toll on my eyes.
s/taste/eyesight/, perhaps?
- erik
In my current computer the fonts look as crisp as any native Mac app,
except for slashes where some jagginess can be seen on close inspection.
Usually I'm not close enough to the computer to notice, but large fonts
have this (currently I'm using Cochin 20 and AnonymousPro 16) To get Monaco
or any
On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 8:50 PM, Blake McBride bl...@mcbride.name wrote:
I'm sure I can get it to compile but I don't see the point.
The point is that fontsrv allows p9p programs (including acme) to use
whatever true-type font you already have on the system.
--
Aram Hăvărneanu
cd /usr/local/plan9/src/cmd/fontsrv/
9 mk install
works fine on my system (p9p on OSX 10.8.5)
Mark.
On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 9:12 PM, Rubén Berenguel ru...@mostlymaths.net wrote:
In my current computer the fonts look as crisp as any native Mac app, except
for slashes where some jagginess can
It's a matter of taste, but I prefer the sharpness of the 1 bit fonts. The
gray,
fuzzy stuff eventually takes a toll on my eyes.
s/taste/eyesight/, perhaps?
Perhaps, but I like to think differences of opinion don't necessarily
indicate physical disability.
sl
On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 2:15 PM, Aram Hăvărneanu ara...@mgk.ro wrote:
On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 8:50 PM, Blake McBride bl...@mcbride.name wrote:
I'm sure I can get it to compile but I don't see the point.
The point is that fontsrv allows p9p programs (including acme) to use
whatever true-type
On Wed Dec 11 15:32:25 EST 2013, s...@9front.org wrote:
It's a matter of taste, but I prefer the sharpness of the 1 bit fonts. The
gray,
fuzzy stuff eventually takes a toll on my eyes.
s/taste/eyesight/, perhaps?
Perhaps, but I like to think differences of opinion don't necessarily
On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 9:30 PM, s...@9front.org wrote:
It's a matter of taste, but I prefer the sharpness of the 1 bit fonts. The
gray,
fuzzy stuff eventually takes a toll on my eyes.
s/taste/eyesight/, perhaps?
Perhaps, but I like to think differences of opinion don't necessarily
When I began using acme, sam, 9term, I much cared about ttf fonts. But
I, too, have come to prefer the sharpness of the 1 bit fonts.
A running joke is that prolonged used of Plan 9 damages your eyesight
until you no longer care what anything looks like. Presumably, at this
point,
Okay. I build and installed fontsrv. I have it running. Now when I do:
9p ls font
it lists all the fonts on my system. One of them is Courier. From acme,
I tried:
Font Courier
But that doesn't work. It tells me:
can't open font file Courier: No such file or directory
It seems fontsrv
see the first reply in this thread
On Wednesday, December 11, 2013, Blake McBride wrote:
Okay. I build and installed fontsrv. I have it running. Now when I do:
9p ls font
it lists all the fonts on my system. One of them is Courier. From
acme, I tried:
Font Courier
But that
I see. Sorry. I tried two different ones and I got:
can't open font file /mnt/font/Courier: bad height or ascent in font file
can't open font file /mnt/font/Menlo-Regular: bad height or ascent in font
file
On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 3:14 PM, andrey mirtchovski
mirtchov...@gmail.comwrote:
see
Sorry again. Re-read first post. I forgot the 12a/font part since it
wasn't displayed in the ls. Now it works as I had hoped. This totally
answers my question.
Thank you all!
Blake
On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 3:21 PM, Blake McBride bl...@mcbride.name wrote:
I see. Sorry. I tried two
On Dec 11, 2013, at 1:10 PM, Blake McBride bl...@mcbride.name wrote:
How can I access the font from acme?
See the EXAMPLES section of the fontsrv(1) manpage.
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Interesting. On the bottom it says fontsrv has no support for X11. Is
there a way to use the fonts that come with Linux?
Another question. Is there a way to use a specific font with sam?
Thanks!
Blake
On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 3:25 PM, Lyndon Nerenberg lyn...@orthanc.ca wrote:
On Dec 11,
On Dec 11, 2013, at 1:56 PM, Blake McBride bl...@mcbride.name wrote:
Another question. Is there a way to use a specific font with sam?
See the EXAMPLES section of the fontsrv(1) manpage.
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Figured it out.
export font=/mnt/font/Courier/12a/font
sam
On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 3:56 PM, Blake McBride bl...@mcbride.name wrote:
Interesting. On the bottom it says fontsrv has no support for X11. Is
there a way to use the fonts that come with Linux?
Another question. Is there a way
On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 10:56 PM, Blake McBride bl...@mcbride.name wrote:
Interesting. On the bottom it says fontsrv has no support for X11. Is
there a way to use the fonts that come with Linux?
It does support X11 now.
Mark.
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