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a small , clear bitmap font with good support latin-script languages and Hebrew

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ninjaaron/bitocra

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Copyright (c) 2011, Aaron Christianson ninjaaron@gmail.com

Licensed under the OFL v1.1

bitocra is a small, clear bitmap font especially for viewing a lot of lines of code or other text at once. It is somewhat stylized after the old OCR-A font, with many changes due to the format and size. It has all iso-8859-1 characters

bitocrafull is the same basic font, with extensive support for Latin unicode characters. Many of the characters in Latin Extended-A (primarily characters used in Eastern European languages as well as some others) are experimental, as I don’t use them, and need confirmation from someone more used to them as to their correctness. Any input in this area is welcome.

Others

  • bitocra13 is a much-requested larger version of bitocra. It currently supports ISO8859 encoding. bitocra13full is not quite as "full" as bitocrafull. It just adds Hebrew and certain other characters.

  • bitocra7 is a never-requested smaller version of bitocra. It is currently only ascii, but will be expanded to ISO8895.

  • 4thD is a 4px font that I made for fun with complete ascii 128 encoding. It may, one day, evolve into the 5thD.

Introducing bitbuntu!

  • bitbuntu and bitbuntufull are fonts in the spirit of the Ubuntu font family with the metrics and default charsets of their bitocra counterparts. This font seems to be quite popular, and may soon recieve it’s own repository.

Install instructions

In some distros, you can simply extract the archive to you ~/.fonts folder, or /usr/share/fonts (or one of it’s subdirectories) if you want it to be available to all users. After that, update your font cache with:

$ fc-cache -fv

And restart your X session.

If you want to add it to your X core fonts, you will need to move to the directory and run mkfontdir, add the directory to your X fontpath:

$ xset +fp /path/to/font
$ xset fp rehash

This will enable it for your session. You can make it perminant by adding the path to /etc/X11/xorg.conf if you have it. If you do don’t (like most people, now that Xorg configures automatically), set the above commands to run with autostart scripts, ~/.xinitrc, or Startup Applications, depending on your WM/DE/DM situation.

If it still doesn’t work

In Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, and possibly other distros, bitmap fonts are disabled by default. This can be fixed by running the following command: In the folder /etc/fonts/conf.d/, there is usually a file responsible for this. In Debian and it’s derivatives, it’s something like 70-no-bitmap-fonts. In Fedora, I think it was in the 20’s, maybe 25-no-bitmaps-fedora. It’s something obvious.

Also -in DEBIAN ONLY- you can run:

# dpkg reconfigure fontconfig-config
# dpkg reconfigure fontcofig

The first command will open a little ncurses thing where you can turn on the bitmap fonts. After that, the above directions ought to work.

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a small , clear bitmap font with good support latin-script languages and Hebrew

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