A programming font, designed with functionality in mind, and with some wibbly-wobbly handwriting-like fuzziness that makes it unassumingly cool. Download or see installation instructions.
Previously known as Cosmic Sans Neue Mono. It appeared that similar names were already in use for other fonts, and that people tended to extend their instinctive hatred of Comic Sans to this very font of mine (which of course can only be loved). Why the previous name? Here is my original explanation:
The name comes from my realization that at some point it looked like the mutant child of Comic Sans and Helvetica Neue. Hopefully it is not the case any more.
Inspirational sources include Inconsolata and Monaco. I have also been using Consolas a lot in my programming life, so it may have some points in common.
The font includes a bold version, with the same metrics as the regular one. Both versions include the same ranges of characters : latin letters, some accented glyphs (quite a lot), some greek letters, some arrows.
Please note that I have not tested all of the glyphs I have drawn (some letters have those two layers of crazy accents that I have never witnessed before), so it might look bad in some cases. Please report these problems: see next section.
It also features a good italic version, which I designed in a fashion similar to Consolas' italic version, with new glyph designs, not just an added slant.
No distractive lovely loop.
Get the pre-activated version here
or see the issue #67
for techniques to activate the stylistic set.
Created by Jany Belluz <jany.belluz AT hotmail.fr>
Licensed under the SIL Open Font License (see LICENSE.txt).
Please send me an e-mail or report an issue on Github if you stumble upon bad design or rendering problems (with screen shot if possible), or if you need more characters, or if you want to compliment me (I love compliments).
You can download the latest version
and install it by hand. In the NoLoopK
variant, the looped lowercase k
is
replaced with a straight version. The LargeLineHeight
variant is especially
useful for users of accented capitals. For more info, see the CHANGELOG.
Automatic installation on macOS with homebrew:
brew tap homebrew/cask-fonts #You only need to do this once for cask-fonts
brew install --cask font-fantasque-sans-mono
Instructions for other platforms might follow.
The build process requires:
- FontForge with python scripting support,
ttfautohint
sfnt2woff
(from thewoff-tools
package on Ubuntu)woff2_compress
from the Google WOFF2 tools orwoff2
package on Ubuntu
Run make
. You should see green stuff and some "OK" messages.
If you are using Ubuntu, please note that the FontForge version
in the default Ubuntu repositories is much outdated at the time of this writing,
and that is known to have caused subtle problems.
You are advised to install FontForge from
this PPA
(using sudo add-apt-repository ppa:fontforge/fontforge
prior to the installation).
Alternatively, you can always download
the latest prebuilt release of these fonts.
make install
will install the TTF fonts into your local .fonts/
directory
and update the font cache. It comes in handy while modifying the font.
Alternatively, if you'd like to build Fantasque without installing required
dependencies, a Dockerfile is provided. Run the following command, and the
fonts will be built to the ./Variants
directory.
docker build -t fantasque .
docker run -v "$(pwd)/Variants:/fantasque/Variants" fantasque
Each variant has a Webfonts/
folder which contains various font formats for
use on the web, along with the matching CSS font declarations. To use them,
you must combine in the same folder:
- a custom
.css
file that you can assemble from the*-decl.css
fragments (you can only pick the styles that you need, e.g. normal and bold) - the matching
.svg
,.woff
,.woff2
files fromWebfonts/
- the matching
.ttf
files from theTTF/
folder - the matching
.otf
files from theOTF/
folder.