On Thu, Sep 8, 2016 at 2:26 AM, Eric Pruitt <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 08, 2016 at 12:48:00AM +0200, Tony Mechelynck wrote:
>> IMHO the proper fix for this would be to select a better ("less
>> buggy", "more modern") font face in your terminal emulator's settings.
>
> If you can name a font that supports the entire Unicode 9 spec with
> appropriate up-to-date widths, I would be happy to configure my terminal
> emulator to is it as a fallback. None of the fonts I have on my system
> support a 2-column voltage symbol.
>
> Eric

In gvim, I see this glyph centered over two screen cells, and my
'guifont' is set to "Bitstream Vera Sans Mono 8"; however, it is a
GTK3/pangocairo build and it will look up other font faces of the same
height and width if the requested font lacks the desired glyph.

In Console Vim, I have tried a couple of fonts, and they all display
the glyph in the left half of a two-cell space.

After constructing the attached HTML file based on your example, I
opened it in my browser (also built with cairo-gtk3), which says that
the font faces actually used for the <tt> element containing the glyph
are FreeMono and FreeSerif; here, the glyph appears right-justified in
a double-width character area.

Good luck,
Tony.

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Title: Test


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