unifont 1:6.3.20131215-1 source package in Ubuntu
Changelog
unifont (1:6.3.20131215-1) unstable; urgency=low * Switched to upstream version 6.3.20131215. (Closes: #698191, #698194, #727309) (LP: #1231173) * debian/compat: now set to "9". * debian/control: - unifont source package now Build-Depends on debhelper (>= 9.0). - Standards-Version updated to 3.9.5. - Removed redundant "Section: fonts" entries. - Added Suggests to unifont-bin for texinfo package, to run makeinfo and texi2pdf if someone wants to change the source documents. - Updated Description fields to reflect the installation of the special-purpose font "Unifont Sample" alongside the standard font "Unifont". * debian/copyright - updated to reflect new licensing arrangements. * debian/README.Debian - removed an extraneous "the". * debian/rules: Now builds with "dh" instead of the old debhelper scripts. * debian/unifont-bin.doc-base: old "unifont-intro.txt" is now "unifont.txt". * debian/unifont-bin.docs: added new document files for binary package. * debian/unifont-bin.info: added to support new Texinfo documentation. * debian/unifont-bin.lintian-overrides: override a probable false positive complaint about hardening. All binaries are built with the very same flags, and lintian only complains about hardening in one of those programs. * src/unihex2png: new program to convert unifont.hex to PNG image. * src/unipng2hex: new program to convert PNG image to unifont.hex. * src/hex2bdf: - Added new XLFD properties for font generation for FreeType and grub-mkfont support; includes version & copyright info. - Fields now begin with upper-case, including "unifont"-->"Unifont". - Changed POINT_SIZE property from 160 to 120. - Added "Sans" style name to FONT string plus XLFD property. - Added command line options for font name, version, & glyph height. - Allow generation of fonts with other than 16 pixel rows/glyph, to support new capabilities of unihex2png, unipng2hex, and hexdraw. * src/unidup.c: now takes an optional file name on the command line. * src/*.c: reformatted to follow GNU Coding Standards. * man/*: Updated man pages to reflect new options, new programs, and to reflect the GPLv2+ license now common to all programs. * doc/: new directory with Texinfo files. * ChangeLog: created new file. * COPYING: created new file. * INSTALL: file created using BUILDING section from old README file. * LICENSE: removed; its contents are in README and COPYING now. * NEWS: created new file. * Makefiles: added "SHELL = /bin/sh" if not already declared. * Makefiles (distclean): added removal of "*~" if not already declared. * Makefile: compress text files with "gzip -f -9" during installation. * font/Makefile: fontforge scripting updated; now adds font copyright, license, version and other info to PCF files. * font/hexsrc/unifont-base.hex: - Redrew several Armenian letters (U+0530..U+058F). - Redrew Capricorn symbol (U+2651). - Redrew CJK Radical Supplement glyphs: U+2E9F, U+2EA9, U+2EAC, U+2EAE, U+2EC0, U+2EDE, U+2EE7, and U+2EED. * font/ttfsrc/Makefile: fontforge scripting command changed from "Simplify(-1,1)" to "Simplify(64,1)" to "merge lines which are nearly parallel into one". This decreases the TrueType file size by almost 2 Megabytes, by reducing the number of control points for a glyph. Also add font copyright, license, version, and other info to TTF files. * font/ttfsrc/Makefile: now builds SBIT font unifont_sample.ttf. * unifontall-*: renamed to "unifont_sample-*". * *.bdf: Added font version, copyright, etc. with hex2bdf. * *.pcf: Added font version, copyright, etc. with fontforge. * *.ttf: Added font version, copyright, etc. with fontforge. * font/*/unifont-*.bmp: Create chart of entire Unifont using pre-built unifont_sample.hex rather than assembling *.hex just for this image. * hangul/hangul-generation.html: updated to correct a typo, where rieul was mentioned as an initial consonant instead of a final consonant in an explanation of vertical spacing constraints. * hangul/Makefile: - Updated hex2bdf parameters to name generated BDF font "Unifont Johab" rather than "unifont" and add copyright. - Used a sed script to change BDF encoding from ISO10646 to "Johab". - Call bdftopcf to create hangul-base.pcf, then compress with gzip. - Add "precompiled:" target to create basic Johab font files. -- Paul Hardy <email address hidden> Sun, 15 Dec 2013 12:19:29 -0800
Upload details
- Uploaded by:
- Paul Hardy
- Uploaded to:
- Sid
- Original maintainer:
- Paul Hardy
- Architectures:
- any all
- Section:
- fonts
- Urgency:
- Low Urgency
See full publishing history Publishing
Series | Published | Component | Section |
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Downloads
File | Size | SHA-256 Checksum |
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unifont_6.3.20131215-1.dsc | 1.2 KiB | 97fc56a236807c17b432e38e5c737556c53eb4bfaf262b76892daf3138577a2c |
unifont_6.3.20131215.orig.tar.gz | 14.0 MiB | c27dd9ea634a16236798742f5f3d5f90200b558ac27c461d3d3e4053d3a18ca4 |
unifont_6.3.20131215-1.diff.gz | 9.8 KiB | 2356c4f4eccbb4b51bbb8a3426f9f02528598ca723627dec16b4b74c982326fa |
Available diffs
No changes file available.
Binary packages built by this source
- ttf-unifont: TrueType version of GNU Unifont
This contains two fonts: "Unifont" and "Unifont Sample".
.
unifont.ttf is a bitmap font converted into a scalable TrueType
outline font, Unifont. Each pixel in the original bitmap font
is represented as an outlined square. The font provides a glyph
for each visible code point (character) in the Unicode Basic
Multilingual Plane (Plane 0). Plane 0 contains most of the
world's modern writing scripts. This font looks best at 12pt.
.
unifont_sample.ttf is an SBIT font that contains combining circles
and is therefore suitable for illustrating individual Unicode glyphs.
unifont.ttf does not contain combining circles and so is suitable
for general-purpose writing.
.
Complex fonts (such as Indic or Semitic scripts, where letters
change shape depending on their position in a word, or such as
Mongolian, which is written vertically) will not render perfectly.
The philosophy behind this font, though, is that anything meaningful
is better than an empty box for a unknown glyph.
- unifont: font with a glyph for each visible Unicode Plane 0 character
This package is a convenient way to install both the PCF bitmap
version and the scalable TrueType outline version of "Unifont"
(intended for general-purpose use) and "Unifont Sample" (which contains
combining circles to use for illustration purposes). It also installs
a copy of unifont.hex and related files in /usr/share/unifont.
.
GNU Unifont was designed to render something besides an empty box
for each visible Unicode character in the Basic Multilingual Plane
(Plane 0). Plane 0 contains most of the world's modern writing
scripts. This font looks best at 12pt.
.
Complex fonts (such as Indic or Semitic scripts, where letters
change shape depending on their position in a word, or such as
Mongolian, which is written vertically) will not render perfectly.
The philosophy behind this font, though, is that anything meaningful
is better than an empty box for a unknown glyph.
- unifont-bin: utilities for manipulating the GNU Unifont
This is a set of Perl scripts, C programs, and FontForge scripts
to manipulate Roman Czyborra's GNU Unifont ".hex" format font
files. GNU Unifont has a Unicode-compatible font structure.
These utilities allow editing ".hex" fonts with text and
graphical editors, producing final versions of fonts in BDF,
PCF, TrueType SBIT, and TrueType outline formats.
.
To build the TrueType fonts, install the package 'fontforge'.
To build the PCF fonts, use 'bdftopcf', which is in the
'xfonts-utils' package. To obtain the font sources, run
'apt-get source unifont'.
- xfonts-unifont: PCF (bitmap) version of GNU Unifont
This contains two fonts: "Unifont" (unifont.pcf.gz) and
"Unifont Sample" (unifont_sample. pcf.gz) .
.
This is a bitmap version of Unifont and Unifont Sample in a
standard X11 format. The fonts provide a glyph for each visible
code point (character) in the Unicode Basic Multilingual Plane
(Plane 0). Plane 0 contains most of the world's modern writing
scripts. These fonts look best at 12pt.
.
Unifont Sample contains combining circles for combining characters,
and so is suited for illustrating individual Unicode glyphs, whereas
Unifont is intended for general-purpose writing.
.
Complex fonts (such as Indic or Semitic scripts, where letters
change shape depending on their position in a word, or such as
Mongolian, which is written vertically) will not render perfectly.
The philosophy behind Unifont, though, is that anything meaningful
is better than an empty box for a unknown glyph.
.
Consider using the TrueType version instead (ttf-unifont), because
that version is scalable to any point size and has proper combining
character support.