A typeface of people silhouettes, to make it easy to build web graphics featuring little people instead of dots. Just add the contents of "weepeople.css" to your page, or link to that CSS file.
The repo has the CSS file, the glyphs, a Truetype font file, and v1 and 2 webfont files.
An open source typeface for hardware people! It renders text like serial data viewed on an oscilloscope, i.e., as a series of visual pulses. The site has a realtime playground so you can see what it looks like. Note that only ascii values are generated currently! There are 1-bit utility characters that can be used to generate arbitrary waveforms, so read the docs on Github.
Programmers use a lot of symbols, often encoded with several characters. For the human brain, sequences like ->, <= or := are single logical tokens, even if they take two or three characters on the screen. Your eye spends a non-zero amount of energy to scan, parse and join multiple characters into a single logical one. Ideally, all programming languages should be designed with full-fledged Unicode symbols for operators, but that’s not the case yet.
Fira Code is a free monospaced font containing ligatures for common programming multi-character combinations. This is just a font rendering feature: underlying code remains ASCII-compatible. This helps to read and understand code faster. For some frequent sequences like .. or //, ligatures allow us to correct spacing.
Welcome to AurekFonts, an archive of fonts from across the galaxy. We are in the never-ending process of expanding our library of in-universe fonts for the languages of the Star Wars universe.
To date, we have catalogued 98 fonts, representing over 28 writing systems and 26 foundries & artists!
Free and libre fonts for desktop and web use.
A clean implementation of a common lettering style found on technical drawings, engraved office signs, computer and typewriter keyboards, and some comic books and avionics from the mid-20th century.
An open source terminal font for BBSes and general terminal usage! This font is based upon FixedSys with adaptations to make it more like the Mode7 TeleText font.
This is a typeface font optimized for people who have dyslexia. Works because each character has a unique shape, which makes it resistant to the phenomena of flipping and reversal during reading. Free for personal use, cheap for school- or company-wide licensing.