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# Creating this because I'm *sure* I'll forget how to do this. | |
# 1. Customize your Input fontface, and download it from their website: | |
open -a Safari \ | |
"http://input.fontbureau.com/download/index.html?size=14&language=javascript&theme=base16-dark&family=InputMono&width=200&weight=300&line-height=1.2&a=0&g=ss&i=serif&l=serifs_round&zero=slash&asterisk=height&braces=straight&preset=dejavu&customize=please" | |
# 2. Download the ‘patcher script’: | |
# (I have no idea why the hell this script requires the `changelog.md` as well; and we [ab]use | |
# GitHub's SVN bridge to download *just* the `src/glyphs`, instead of the 100s of megabytes of | |
# pre-patched fonts) | |
cd ~/Downloads/Input-Font | |
curl -o nerd-patcher.py -JO -fsSl --proto-redir -all,https \ | |
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ryanoasis/nerd-fonts/1.0.0/{font-patcher,changelog.md} | |
svn checkout https://github.com/ryanoasis/nerd-fonts/branches/1.0.0/src/glyphs src/glyphs | |
# 3. Install the patcher-script's dependencies: | |
brew install fontforge | |
# 4. Patch the files: | |
for font in Input_Fonts/Input/*.ttf; do | |
python nerd-patcher.py --careful --complete --progressbars "$font"; done | |
# 5. Install the patched fonts: | |
open -a 'Font Book' 'Input '* |
Sorry for the slow response! I actually gave up on this for a while but have tried again on MacOS 10.13.3 with success:
- clone the nerd-fonts repo
- install fontforge via brew
sudo easy_install pip
andsudo pip install configparser
(I tried using python3 from brew, but that didn't work, so sticking with the system python)-
for font in ~/Downloads/Input-Font/Input_Fonts/Input/*.ttf do fontforge -script ./font-patcher --careful --complete --progressbars "$font" done
I get one minor warning from Font Book about the BoldItalic variation ('name' table usability
), but it all seems to work nicely:
You can also try adding --adjust-line-height
to the list of patcher arguments. If you look closely, the Powerline separator isn't exactly the same height as the prompt. I'm sure it has to do with either the line height I chose when creating a custom Input font, or the exaggerated vertical spacing I'm adding in iTerm2. Either way, it appears to only be a pixel off ... I can live with it. 😄
@cviebrock you rock! I had the same problem. One other issue I had was if I patched with --complete
then letter J would turn into an icon. Excluding --materialicons
solves the issue for my flavor of Input Mono
@cviebrock Any luck on this? I'm trying to patch operator mono and have the same problem