XCruise allows you to ``cruise'' within a 3D-formed file system.
It constructs the universe from a directory tree, and you can
move your viewpoint with mouse.
It is only a viewer, take care of motion sickness, though.
This is set of improved artwiz fonts.
They are compatible with the latest fontconfig/Xft-2.0.
Thus the artwiz fonts work in gtk2/kde3 applications.
This is set of improved artwiz fonts.
They are compatible with the latest fontconfig/Xft-2.0.
Thus the artwiz fonts work in gtk2/kde3 applications.
This is set of improved artwiz fonts.
They are compatible with the latest fontconfig/Xft-2.0.
Thus the artwiz fonts work in gtk2/kde3 applications.
The DejaVu fonts are a font family based on the Bitstream Vera Fonts. Its
purpose is to provide a wider range of characters while maintaining the
original look and feel through the process of collaborative development.
A program for making font samples that show Unicode coverage of the font and are
similar in appearance to Unicode charts. Samples can be saved as PDF or
PostScript files.
Fontmatrix is a graphical font manager. Targeted audience are mostly
adventurous graphic designers and typesetters who deal with hundreds
and even more fonts during their work - browsing the endless lists
of font dialogs. Basically, the Fontmatrix helps doing three things:
activation and deactivation of fonts, tagging fonts and fontbook
generation.
MonteCarlo is a bitmap font suitable for code editors. All the characters
have the same width, which is ideal for alignment. It is loosely derived
from the look of the Monaco screen font that was available on the old MacOS
systems. Some changes have been made to make it easier to differentiate
certain symbols.
The proggy programmer's fonts (Proggy Clean, Proggy Square, Proggy Small,
and Proggy Tiny) are a set of fixed-width screen fonts that are designed
for code listings. Each font only comes in one size that it looks good at.
The fonts were optimized while coding in C or C++. For this reason,
characters like the '*' were placed vertically centered, as '*' usually
means dereference or multiply, but never 'to the power of' like in Fortran.
The {}s are centered horizontally (as the author's coding style aligns
braces vertically), the zero looks different from the capital oh, and there
is never any confusion between ells, ones, and eyes. Additionally, the
arithmetic operators (+ - * < >) are all axis aligned.
The proggy programmer's fonts (Proggy Clean, Proggy Square, Proggy Small,
and Proggy Tiny) are a set of fixed-width screen fonts that are designed
for code listings. Each font only comes in one size that it looks good at.
The fonts were optimized while coding in C or C++. For this reason,
characters like the '*' were placed vertically centered, as '*' usually
means dereference or multiply, but never 'to the power of' like in Fortran.
The {}s are centered horizontally (as the author's coding style aligns
braces vertically), the zero looks different from the capital oh, and there
is never any confusion between ells, ones, and eyes. Additionally, the
arithmetic operators (+ - * < >) are all axis aligned.