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league-mono's Issues

Not registering as monospace with gVim

I am attempting to use this font in gVim for Windows but the editor does not recognise it as a monospaced font on the system. Is the PANOSE Proportion Code not set to Monospaced? As I believe this is how they are recognised.

Are you planning to support ligatures?

I know it’s a mashup of Fira Mono, not Fira Code, but still, the reason I prefer Fira Code to a lot of other monospace fonts is ligatures. Are those in the plans for League Mono?

Drop the "No Glyph" glyph

I've been doing tests with mono-space fonts in my terminal that include double width characters. These are actually pretty common as poor-man's-ligatures in programming contexts. One thing I've run across that's really obnoxious is a handful of fonts that have placeholder glyphs rather than no glyphs for unimplemented code points. I'm sure this is a well intentioned attempt to un-confuse people running across the dreaded empty boxes — and in some contexts it is a cute fix, but in others it is obscenely obnoxious — such as when what you are trying to do is make use of font fallbacks such as almost all modern operating systems and typesetting systems support (even vim in my terminal!).

Another thing that is going to wreak havoc with is automated tooling to determine and render specimens for font coverage. You can't easily figure out what is implemented if there are fillers.

I propose entirely nuking the "No Glyph" glyph and leaving unimplemented glyphs as non-existent so that other tools can figure out what to do with them.

image

In my opinion these are to fonts what null is to programming languages: a billion dollar mistake. Not as costly but still an ultimate downgrade in function just because you couldn't resist.

The difference between ^ and *

The font looks pretty good and clear, but the difference between ^ and * is hard to spot. They are too small, especially the *. In my opinion other glyphs should be somewhat bigger as well, as they can be hard to differentiate. For example ' vs " and , vs .

glyphs

Please add ↪ (U+21AA) for KDE default text editor

Hello, the character "↪" is used by Kate (KDE default text editor) to denote lines wrap into multiple lines. Examples belows.
hack-font

Here how 'Hack' font looks in Kate

League Mono
Here how 'League Mono' font looks in Kate. Here Kate uses a fallback font.

Remove RFN

The rfn prevents subsetting without renaming, which increasingly important for variable fonts :)

Cyrillic glyphs

Thank you very much for font, but I would like to write in Russian

Condensed static instance has irregular name

Most of the width variant instances have names like LeagueMono-WidthWeight where weight includes "Regular" for the 400 weight. Only the condensed instances don't follow this convention. We could go either way, but the naming should be consistent.

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