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Old Timey Code and Old Timey Mono Fonts

192 points| dsevil | 10 months ago |github.com

33 comments

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dsevil|10 months ago

Based on Reproducing Typewriter, a letterpress typeface from c. 1906 used to create fake typewritten letters for promotional material. Where other monospace typefaces replicated actual typewriters, Reproducing Typewriter had improvements for better readability at smaller point sizes and/or where poor quality reproduction was an issue.

I thought its features would make it the basis of a good coding font, too. Old Timey Mono is much closer to the original while Old Timey Code makes it an even better typeface for writing source code.

It was the coding font used in the Turbo Pascal 3.0 user manual. I've not seen it elsewhere except old patents' cover pages.

Enjoy and if you have any comments or questions, comment or enquire away.

https://github.com/dse/old-timey-mono-font

https://webonastick.com/fonts/old-timey-mono/

VTimofeenko|9 months ago

Thanks so much for making it! Usually fonts like this are a non-starter for me since they lack Cyrillic letters. Your inclusion of those symbols is much appreciated.

merecactus|9 months ago

Thank you so much for making and sharing this. I'm especially grateful that you included the code variant. I'm not a programmer but love monospace fonts but the lack of a slashed zero in so many otherwise lovely fonts has been a deal breaker for me!

wmwragg|9 months ago

Looking at the examples, they look good, though one thing stands out, the "w" seems to be bolder than the other letters. The "m" seems fine, as do the other letters and symbols, just the "w".

bluenose69|9 months ago

Based on the first link, it seems as though zero and upper-case "O" are very similar. (My eyes cannot discern a difference, but I admit that my eyes are not top-notch.)

chrchr|9 months ago

It's gorgeous. Thanks for making and sharing it!

actionfromafar|9 months ago

You wouldn't consider changing license to Apache-2.0, or dual license under that?

Telemakhos|9 months ago

This is pretty nice: thanks for including polytonic Greek and macrons over Latin vowels including over y. I especially love how the breathing marks and accents look together over initial vowels in Greek, and I love zeta (ζ) and xi (ξ) in this font.

Might I make a few specific suggestions:

- allow combining breve over Latin y as well: sometimes that's handy for indicating contrast

- check the height of stacking diacritical marks: a perispomenos tonos or circumflex accent over a breathing mark over a vowel (like in εἶναι eĩnai) ends up stacking up tall enough to intersect with descenders (like on ζ zeta) from the line above

- the circumflex over alpha (ᾶ) looks really good, because it follows the curve of the alpha itself, but circumflex over eta (ῆ) looks off-center, because it left-aligns to the ear on the left of eta. The same could be said for the iota subscript (ᾳῃῳ): it looks great under alpha and omega, but it's a bit awkward under eta because of how far to the left it is.

- have you considered adding a variation for the Porsonic or single-curve circumflex?

dsevil|9 months ago

Ok so there's no capital or small Y with breve in Unicode.

Are you seeing the combining breve to the right of the Y/y (instead of atop it) when trying to use them?

Your suggestions are welcome, thank you!

ahazred8ta|9 months ago

Is ther a test page online that you can recommend?

kleiba|9 months ago

Apparently, the letter ß is not included which is used in German. That's why German is absent from the list of supported languages.

brainwad|9 months ago

Just the uppercase variant ẞ - the lowercase ß _is_ there. Notably, uppercase ẞ didn't exist at the time the source typeface was designed – it was only officially adopted 111 years later in 2017.

JohnDeHope|9 months ago

I can't tell if you're aiming for a faithful reproduction of the original font, or to make the coding font modern and most useful to today's developer. But... Can the code variant have the asterisk used to represent multiplication be on the same line as other math operators like plus, minus, and tilde? +-~* I always like the asterisk to be in line with the others. Maybe I am just weird. Also for the code variant I think the pound or hash mark # could be reduced in drama a little, to fit in with the other punctuation marks. Thanks for listening to my two cents.

dsevil|9 months ago

Old Timey Mono is the mostly faithful reproduction.

Old Timey Code is the coding friendly font.

I'm aiming for both.

psunavy03|9 months ago

I'm trying the code version out, and the only minor tweak I could mention is that having the option for a dotted zero would be clutch. The other typewriter font that has one is narrower, and this one reads better otherwise, at least to me.

mhd|9 months ago

I'm currently using an old copy of Letter Gothic 12 Pitch from an ancient Ventura Publisher CD, and like that style a lot, so definitely going to try this.

evan_piermont|9 months ago

Is there a(n easy) way to integrate this into Latex, to use it for math fonts?

phorkyas82|9 months ago

If you want to use non standard fonts, I think, you should use XeLaTex to compile your file. After installing the font in the system, this just worked on my Ubuntu:

\usepackage{mathspec} \setallmainfonts(Digits,Latin){Old Timey Mono}

\begin{document}

Just test some equation \begin{equation} \frac{e^x}{2-x} = \int_0^\infty f(x)dx \end{equation}

\end{document}

plumbees|9 months ago

Windows is not liking the font files :( Will wait for next release

dsevil|9 months ago

When clicking to OPEN them (which I'm not able to do) or just right-clicking to INSTALL them (which I'm able to do)?

kaitocross|9 months ago

I wonder why Luxembourgish is supported when German is not...

mcv|9 months ago

Maybe Luxembourgish doesn't have an uppercase ẞ?

Dutch is also not supported. Presumbly no support for the 'ij' digraph. But do you even need that in a monospace font? Admittedly old Dutch typewriters used to have a single character for it, but that's really old-timey.

olelele|9 months ago

Looks great! Will use!