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: B I G B L U E T E R M I N A L :
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An oldschool fixed-width pixel font / v1.00
1. What's this?
2. Contents
3. Sizes & display
4. Formats & encodings
5. 'Plus' version notes
6. Bonus DOS stuff
7. Credits & acknowledgements
8. Contact
9. Legal stuff
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WHAT'S THIS? ===============
BigBlue Terminal is a monospaced pixel font, designed for use in fixed- width textual environments (consoles/terminals, text/code/hex editors and so on). It follows the metrics and dimensions of Windows' old Terminal font (at the 9pt/12px size), but the appearance is closer to the classic IBM PC text mode character sets.
At 8x12 pixels, Terminal is nicely compact and useful, but also kind of ugly. Instead, BigBlue Terminal is closely based on IBM's 8x14 EGA/VGA charset -- I just like it better. Basically, that font has been squeezed and modified to fit into a 8x12-pixel cell. For the extended 'Plus' version, many additional Unicode characters have been added to support international scripts and symbol sets.
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CONTENTS ===========
BigBlue_TerminalPlus.TTF BigBlue TerminalPlus TrueType font Multi-language Unicode character set
BigBlue_Terminal_437TT.TTF BigBlue Terminal 437TT TrueType font Codepage 437 (DOS/OEM-US) mapped to Unicode
Bigblue_Terminal_437BM.FON BigBlue Terminal 437BM Windows bitmap format Code page 437 (DOS/OEM-US)
BLUETERM.F12 Raw bitmap font data
BLUETERM.COM TSR font loader for DOS/VGA
README.TXT This file
LICENSE.TXT CC-BY-SA 4.0 license terms
- SIZES & DISPLAY ==================
The native font size is 8x12. Since this is a pixel font, it'll look best at a size of 12 pixels (or integer multiples of 12), whether you're using the bitmap or TrueType versions. Otherwise you will get fugly artifacted scaling.
On Windows, this translate to 9 pt (at the default screen density of 96 PPI); on Mac, you'll want 12 pt (72 PPI). Do the math for other screen densities. On newfangled super-high-PPI displays, scaling artifacts become less apparent, so you may be able to get away with arbitrary sizes.
Current operating systems usually have subpixel anti-aliasing enabled by default: ClearType on Windows, FreeType on Linux, Core Text on Mac OS X. This is less than ideal for TrueType pixel fonts, since it may introduce a sort of "color fringing" effect in some cases.
In practice I don't find it that noticeable, but it bothers you, you can get rid of it. On Windows, turn ClearType off or use the bitmap (.FON) version. On Linux, there are ways to disable anti-aliasing for specific fonts with FreeType. You'll have to see your docs/the web on how to pull that off though.
- FORMATS & ENCODINGS ======================
This version features the Codepage 437 character set (DOS/OEM-US). Since any TrueType font can (and should) include a Unicode character map, this is still a Unicode font, and has multi-platform support as such.
CP437 can be problematic to map to Unicode, due to characters 00h-1Fh and 7Fh: they can be interpreted either as control codes, or as graphical symbols. Thus there are two 'canonical' Unicode maps for CP437, and software that expects one of them may not play nice with the other one.
This font covers both bases in the same mapping: the problem characters are duplicated so that your program will find them at either placement. Windows detects the font as an "OEM/DOS" one, and you can use it in any program/environment that understands this charset (including the Command Prompt). The same will be true on other platforms, as long as your software is properly configured -- RTFM, GIYF, etc.
This is more of a "Unicode font" as most people grok the term. On top of the CP437 range, this version supports extended Latin, Greek, Cyrillic and Hebrew scripts plus a bunch of additional glyphs and Unicode symbols.
There are 782 characters in total (more than the Windows Glyph List 4 -- in fact the entire WGL4 range is there). Some were based on various international codepages, others were drawn entirely by hand to match the visual style. A handful of the cp437 characters had to be remapped (see the next section), but they're all still around as well.
A straight bitmap version of the DOS/CP437 charset. This may still be more useful than 437TT in certain situations:
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You don't need to modify the registry to use it in the Command Prompt (or any console window).
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.FON isn't Unicode, so this version can force the CP437 encoding on programs like Notepad, which insist on failing miserably otherwise.
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Bitmap fonts aren't subject to ClearType subpixel anti-aliasing.
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'PLUS' VERSION CHARACTER MAP NOTES =====================================
If you care about this sort of thing, you can use your favorite font viewer to see the full character range. Windows has charmap.exe (I like SIL ViewGlyph better), OS X has Font Book, etc. A few things that may be of interest about the expanded 'Plus' character mapping:
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Alternate number forms: there's a flat-top "3" mapped to U+01B7 ('Latin capital letter Ezh'), which is more easily distinguished from the Cyrillic letter Ze. Also, two alternative zeroes (dotted and slashed) are mapped to U+2299 ('circled dot operator') and U+2300 ('diameter symbol') respectively.
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Cursor shapes: Unicode character U+2581 ('lower one eight block') can be used to mimic the classic text-mode cursor appearance. U+2584 ('lower half block') and U+2588 ('full block') could also stand in for those respective cursor forms, too.
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The 'Plus' version includes a full Greek alphabet, which takes over the code points that Unicode assigns to the Greek/Math characters from DOS codepage 437. Instead of just dropping the CP437 originals, I tried to preserve them at remapped code points that make some sense. Here's what's changed:
CP437 Canonical mapping from Modified 'Plus' mapping Char CP437 to Unicode from CP437 to Unicode
à (E0h) U+03B1 'Greek small Alpha' U+0251 'Latin small Alpha' á (E1h) U+00DF 'Latin small Sharp S' U+03D0 'Greek Beta symbol' â (E2h) U+0393 'Greek capital Gamma' U+1D26 'Small capital Gamma' ã (E3h) U+03C0 'Greek small Pi' U+1D28 'Small capital Pi' ä (E4h) U+03A3 'Greek capital Sigma' U+2211 'N-ary Summation' å (E5h) U+03C3 'Greek small Sigma' U+01A1 'Small o with horn' ç (E7h) U+03C4 'Greek small Tau' U+1D1B 'Small capital T' è (E8h) U+03A6 'Greek capital Phi' U+0278 'Latin small Phi' é (E9h) U+0398 'Greek capital Theta' U+03F4 'Capital Theta symbol' ê (EAh) U+03A9 'Greek capital Omega' U+2126 'Ohm symbol' ë (EBh) U+03B4 'Greek small Delta' U+1E9F 'Latin small Delta' í (EDh) U+03C6 'Greek small Phi' U+2205 'Empty set' î (EEh) U+03B5 'Greek small Epsilon' U+2208 'Element of'
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BONUS DOS STUFF ==================
Yes, you can get BigBlue Terminal working in actual DOS too, because you are just THAT oldschool! The following files will let you do that on any VGA-compatible DOS machine (or in DOSBox, PCEm and so on).
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BLUETERM.COM: a TSR program (courtesy of ripsaw8080) that gives you a 640x480 text mode with the 8x12 font -- 80 rows by 40 columns. It persists across mode changes, and I find it nice to use in DOSBox, since 640x480 is a square-pixel resolution and doesn't get mangled by aspect correction.
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BLUETERM.F12: the raw bitmap font data, usable with any font-loading program such as Yossi Gil's LOADFONT (from the widespread FNTCOL16 archive). You'll typically get the standard 400-line text mode, and with a 12-scanline font this gives you 33 rows of text.
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CREDITS & ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS =============================
- Fonts, documentation and ASCII logo by VileR.
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ripsaw8080, for providing the code for the TSR DOS version (and for granting permission to include it here)
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Rebecca G. Bettencourt/Kreative Korp, for responding to my inquiries with a surprise open-source release of the awesome Bits'n'Picas bitmap- to-outline converter
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Bitmap font editing: Fony 1.4.7 by hukka http://hukka.ncn.fi/?fony
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Bitmap-to-outline vectorization: Bits'n'Picas by Kreative Korp https://github.com/kreativekorp/bitsnpicas
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TrueType font editing, fine-tuning, re-encoding etc.: FontForge by George Williams and the FontForge Project http://fontforge.github.io/
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Windows .TTF testing/viewing: SIL ViewGlyph v1.81.0 by Bob Hallissy/ SIL International http://scripts.sil.org/ViewGlyph_home
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CONTACT ==========
I can be reached at: email - viler -AT- int10h -DOT- org www - http://int10h.org blog - http://8088mph.blogspot.com
Spam and/or excessive dumbness will be ignored, deleted, spindled and mutilated.
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LEGAL STUFF ==============
BigBlue Terminal is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
You should have received a copy of the license along with this work. If not, see http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/.
(c) 2015 VileR
- Pick your font family and then select from the
'complete'
directory.- If you are on Windows pick a font with the
'Windows Compatible'
suffix.- This includes specific tweaks to ensure the font works on Windows, in particular monospace identification and font name length limitations
- If you are limited to monospaced fonts (because of your terminal, etc) then pick a font with the
'Mono'
suffix.- This denotes that the Nerd Font glyphs will be monospaced not necessarily that the entire font will be monospaced
- If you are on Windows pick a font with the
By the Nerd Font policy, the variant with the 'Mono'
suffix is not supposed to have any ligatures.
Use the non-Mono variants to have ligatures.
Once you narrow down your font choice of family (Droid Sans
, Inconsolata
, etc) and style (bold
, italic
, etc) you have 2 main choices:
- download an already patched font from the
complete
folder- This is most likely the one you want. It includes all of the glyphs from all of the glyph sets. Only caution here is that some fonts have glyphs in the same code point so to include everything some had to be moved to alternate code points.
- patch your own variations with the various options provided by the font patcher (see each font's readme for full list of combinations available)
- This is the option you want if the font you use is not already included or you want maximum control of what's included
- This contains a list of all permutations of the various glyphs. E.g. You want the font with only Octicons or you want the font with just Font Awesome and Devicons. The goal is to provide every combination possible in this folder.
For more information see: The FAQ