Reminded me a teenie tiny bit of the original font used by Habbo Hotel Volter (Goldfish) which has a rough pixel look to it (at least that's how my nostalgia makes me see it) they got rid of the Volter font when Habbo upgraded from Adobe Shockwave to Adobe Flash, they went to Ubuntu font if I remember correctly. I still miss the old font.
My favorite thing about Habbo's font from back in 2001 is the "emojis" that it had. If you played Habbo back then, you were likely using emojis before they were cool. ;)
That editor is really cool; you can even see the font change live on the left!
Yes this threw me off when I first opened it. When you select the letter field you see a flashing cursor but you can't erase the character and type a new one. Instead you have to type a new character which overwrites the old "editing" character. This is confusing because it's not the behavior that the user expects when they see a flashing cursor in a text input.
I would suggest allowing people to erase the letter and type a new one in the editing field.
Once I figured out this little UI hiccup I found it absolutely delightful to play with this. What a fascinating experiment in making a font immediately editable, like a mini font-REPL. I've often been interested in (but never dabbled in) creating or editing fonts. This made that itch immediately scratchable in a raw, primitive way that unlocked something interesting in my brain.
Cool but pretty bad edit UI. Can't figure out how to edit an existing letter without starting from scratch. One letter at a time. What are even the additional grids below the letter being edited?
This needs more upvotes. Hopefully the author reads this comment and provides a hint on how to create extra grids (accidentally deleted one, now I only have 2)
Will need to try this in a terminal but on initial glance it looks similar to terminus (a font I've been trying to find a replacement for for over 20 years....)
Reminds when I was doing my own bitmap fonts on ZX Spectrum and Amiga. They were probably very ugly by today's standards but they were mine :) I guess I'll create one for my terminal, it probably won't be used there for too long but it would remind me of times when I was more in control of my machine.
edit: tried to type "à", and the letter is not recognized in the font (appears in red in the editor).
Would there be a way to tell the editor that "à" = "a" + "`", rather than retyping the symbol from scratch?
edit2 : Having to remove all the [2..n] points if you want to change the second point you made is also a bit of a pain, especially for people like me with little experience of where the points end up being on the line vertically.
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[ 12.4 ms ] story [ 639 ms ] threadMy favorite thing about Habbo's font from back in 2001 is the "emojis" that it had. If you played Habbo back then, you were likely using emojis before they were cool. ;)
That editor is really cool; you can even see the font change live on the left!
https://www.dafont.com/volter-goldfish.font
I would suggest allowing people to erase the letter and type a new one in the editing field.
Once I figured out this little UI hiccup I found it absolutely delightful to play with this. What a fascinating experiment in making a font immediately editable, like a mini font-REPL. I've often been interested in (but never dabbled in) creating or editing fonts. This made that itch immediately scratchable in a raw, primitive way that unlocked something interesting in my brain.
This is a great example of what art can do.
There is no way to undo, redo, or move the anchor points. At least you can delete the last line segment by clicking on the last point.
In italian "Brutalita" (but with an accent on the last a: "Brutalità") it means brutality.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metafont
Reminds when I was doing my own bitmap fonts on ZX Spectrum and Amiga. They were probably very ugly by today's standards but they were mine :) I guess I'll create one for my terminal, it probably won't be used there for too long but it would remind me of times when I was more in control of my machine.
https://fontstruct.com/
edit: tried to type "à", and the letter is not recognized in the font (appears in red in the editor).
Would there be a way to tell the editor that "à" = "a" + "`", rather than retyping the symbol from scratch?
edit2 : Having to remove all the [2..n] points if you want to change the second point you made is also a bit of a pain, especially for people like me with little experience of where the points end up being on the line vertically.
en: Hello, World! zh: 你好,世界!
You can copy that in their font editor to give it a try.