non port: x11-fonts/py-fontfeatures/distinfo |
Number of commits found: 3 |
Wednesday, 16 Aug 2023
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18:25 Po-Chuan Hsieh (sunpoet)
x11-fonts/py-fontfeatures: Update to 1.8.0
Changes: https://github.com/simoncozens/fontFeatures/commits/master
1c0ebfc |
Monday, 30 Jan 2023
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13:00 Po-Chuan Hsieh (sunpoet)
x11-fonts/py-fontfeatures: Update to 1.7.4
Changes: https://github.com/simoncozens/fontFeatures/commits/master
d9df0c5 |
Friday, 30 Dec 2022
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09:04 Po-Chuan Hsieh (sunpoet)
x11-fonts/py-fontfeatures: Add py-fontfeatures 1.7.3
OpenType fonts are "programmed" using features, which are normally authored in
Adobe's feature file format. This like source code to a computer program: it's a
user-friendly, but computer-unfriendly, way to represent the features.
Inside a font, the features are compiled in an efficient internal format. This
is like the binary of a computer program: computers can use it, but they can't
do else anything with it, and people can't read it.
The purpose of this library is to provide a middle ground for representing
features in a machine-manipulable format, kind of like the abstract syntax tree
of a computer programmer. This is so that:
- features can be represented in a structured human-readable and
machine-readable way, analogous to the XML files of the Unified Font Object
format.
- features can be more directly authored by programs (such as font editors),
rather than them having to output AFDKO feature file format.
- features can be easily manipulated by programs - for example, features from
two files merged together, or lookups moved between languages.
5400271 |
Number of commits found: 3 |