GNU ELPA - fontaine

fontaine

Description
Set font configurations using presets
Latest
fontaine-1.0.0.tar, 2023-Feb-11, 180 KiB
Maintainer
Fontaine Development <~protesilaos/fontaine@lists.sr.ht>
Website
https://git.sr.ht/~protesilaos/fontaine
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Manual
fontaine

To install this package, run in Emacs:

M-x package-install RET fontaine RET

Full description

This manual, written by Protesilaos Stavrou, describes the customization options for fontaine (or fontaine.el), and provides every other piece of information pertinent to it.

The documentation furnished herein corresponds to stable version 1.0.0, released on 2023-02-11. Any reference to a newer feature which does not yet form part of the latest tagged commit, is explicitly marked as such.

Current development target is 1.1.0-dev.

1 COPYING

Copyright (C) 2022-2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts being “A GNU Manual,” and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled “GNU Free Documentation License.”

(a) The FSF’s Back-Cover Text is: “You have the freedom to copy and modify this GNU manual.”

2 Overview

Fontaine lets the user specify presets of font configurations and set them on demand on graphical Emacs frames. The user option fontaine-presets holds all such presets.

Presets consist of a list of properties that govern the family, weight, and height of the faces default, fixed-pitch, fixed-pitch-serif, variable-pitch, bold, and italic. Each preset is identified by a user-defined symbol as the car of a property list. It looks like this (check the default value of fontaine-presets for how everything is pieced together):

(regular
 ;; I keep all properties for didactic purposes, but most can be
 ;; omitted.
 :default-family "Monospace"
 :default-weight regular
 :default-height 100
 :fixed-pitch-family nil ; falls back to :default-family
 :fixed-pitch-weight nil ; falls back to :default-weight
 :fixed-pitch-height 1.0
 :fixed-pitch-serif-family nil ; falls back to :default-family
 :fixed-pitch-serif-weight nil ; falls back to :default-weight
 :fixed-pitch-serif-height 1.0
 :variable-pitch-family "Sans"
 :variable-pitch-weight nil
 :variable-pitch-height 1.0
 :bold-family nil ; use whatever the underlying face has
 :bold-weight bold
 :italic-family nil
 :italic-slant italic
 :line-spacing nil)

The doc string of fontaine-presets explains all properties in detail and documents some important caveats or information about font settings in Emacs.

Shared and implicit fallback values for presets.

The command fontaine-set-preset applies the desired preset. If there is only one available, it implements it outright. Otherwise it produces a minibuffer prompt with completion among the available presets. When called from Lisp, the fontaine-set-preset requires a PRESET argument, such as:

(fontaine-set-preset 'regular)

The default behaviour of fontaine-set-preset is to change fonts across all graphical frames. The user can, however, limit the changes to a given frame. For interactive use, this is done by invoking the command with a universal prefix argument (C-u by default), which changes fonts only in the current frame. When used in Lisp, the FRAME argument can be a frame object (satisfies framep) or a non-nil value: the former applies the effects to the given object, while the latter means the current frame and thus is the same as interactively supplying the prefix argument.

The command fontaine-set-face-font prompts with completion for a face and then asks the user to specify the value of the relevant properties. Preferred font families can be defined in the user option fontaine-font-families, otherwise Fontaine will try to find suitable options among the fonts installed on the system (not always reliable, depending on the Emacs build and environment it runs in). The list of faces to choose from is the same as that implied by the fontaine-presets. Properties to change and their respective values will depend on the face. For example, the default face requires a natural number for its height attribute, whereas every other face needs a floating point (understood as a multiple of the default height). This command is for interactive use only and is supposed to be used for previewing certain styles before eventually codifying them as presets.

Changing the bold and italic faces only has a noticeable effect if the underlying theme does not hardcode a weight and slant but inherits from those faces instead (e.g. the modus-themes).

The fontaine-set-face-font also accepts an optional FRAME argument, which is the same as what was described above for fontaine-set-preset.

The latest value of fontaine-set-preset is stored in a file whose location is defined in fontaine-latest-state-file (normally part of the .emacs.d directory). Saving is done by the function fontaine-store-latest-preset, which should be assigned to a hook (e.g. kill-emacs-hook). To restore that value, the user can call the function fontaine-restore-latest-preset (such as by adding it to their init file).

For users of the no-littering package, fontaine-latest-state-file is not stored in their .emacs.d, but in a standard directory instead: https://github.com/emacscollective/no-littering.

As for the name of this package, it is the French word for “fountain” which, in turn, is what the font or source is. However, I will not blame you if you can only interpret it as a descriptive acronym: FONTs Are Irrelevant in Non-graphical Emacs (because that is actually true).

2.1 Shared and implicit fallback values for presets

Inherit the properties of another named preset.

The user option fontaine-presets may look like this (though check its default value before you make any edits):

(setq fontaine-presets
      '((regular
	 :default-family "Hack"
	 :default-weight normal
	 :default-height 100
	 :fixed-pitch-family "Fira Code"
	 :fixed-pitch-weight nil ; falls back to :default-weight
	 :fixed-pitch-height 1.0
	 :variable-pitch-family "Noto Sans"
	 :variable-pitch-weight normal
	 :variable-pitch-height 1.0
	 :bold-family nil ; use whatever the underlying face has
	 :bold-weight bold
	 :italic-family "Source Code Pro"
	 :italic-slant italic
	 :line-spacing 1)
	(large
	 :default-family "Iosevka"
	 :default-weight normal
	 :default-height 150
	 :fixed-pitch-family nil ; falls back to :default-family
	 :fixed-pitch-weight nil ; falls back to :default-weight
	 :fixed-pitch-height 1.0
	 :variable-pitch-family "FiraGO"
	 :variable-pitch-weight normal
	 :variable-pitch-height 1.05
	 :bold-family nil ; use whatever the underlying face has
	 :bold-weight bold
	 :italic-family nil ; use whatever the underlying face has
	 :italic-slant italic
	 :line-spacing 1)))

Notice that not all properties need to be specified, as they have reasonable fallback values. The above can be written thus (removed lines are left empty for didactic purposes):

(setq fontaine-presets
      '((regular
	 :default-family "Hack"

	 :default-height 100
	 :fixed-pitch-family "Fira Code"


	 :variable-pitch-family "Noto Sans"




	 :italic-family "Source Code Pro"

	 :line-spacing 1)
	(large
	 :default-family "Iosevka"

	 :default-height 150



	 :variable-pitch-family "FiraGO"






	 :line-spacing 1)))

Without the empty lines, we have this, which yields the same results as the first example:

(setq fontaine-presets
      '((regular
	 :default-family "Hack"
	 :default-height 100
	 :fixed-pitch-family "Fira Code"
	 :variable-pitch-family "Noto Sans"
	 :italic-family "Source Code Pro"
	 :line-spacing 1)
	(large
	 :default-family "Iosevka"
	 :default-height 150
	 :variable-pitch-family "FiraGO"
	 :line-spacing 1)))

We call the properties of the removed lines “implicit fallback values”.

This already shows us that the value of fontaine-presets does not need to be extensive. To further improve its conciseness, it accepts a special preset that provides a list of “shared fallback properties”: the t preset. This one is used to define properties that are common to multiple presets, such as the regular and large we have illustrated thus far. Here is how verbose presets can be expressed succinctly:

;; Notice the duplication of properties and how we will avoid it.
(setq fontaine-presets
      '((regular
	 :default-family "Iosevka Comfy"
	 :default-weight normal
	 :default-height 100
	 :fixed-pitch-family nil ; falls back to :default-family
	 :fixed-pitch-weight nil ; falls back to :default-weight
	 :fixed-pitch-height 1.0
	 :variable-pitch-family "FiraGO"
	 :variable-pitch-weight normal
	 :variable-pitch-height 1.05
	 :bold-family nil ; use whatever the underlying face has
	 :bold-weight bold
	 :italic-family nil
	 :italic-slant italic
	 :line-spacing nil)
	(medium
	 :default-family "Iosevka Comfy"
	 :default-weight semilight
	 :default-height 140
	 :fixed-pitch-family nil ; falls back to :default-family
	 :fixed-pitch-weight nil ; falls back to :default-weight
	 :fixed-pitch-height 1.0
	 :variable-pitch-family "FiraGO"
	 :variable-pitch-weight normal
	 :variable-pitch-height 1.05
	 :bold-family nil ; use whatever the underlying face has
	 :bold-weight bold
	 :italic-family nil
	 :italic-slant italic
	 :line-spacing nil)
	(large
	 :default-family "Iosevka Comfy"
	 :default-weight semilight
	 :default-height 180
	 :fixed-pitch-family nil ; falls back to :default-family
	 :fixed-pitch-weight nil ; falls back to :default-weight
	 :fixed-pitch-height 1.0
	 :variable-pitch-family "FiraGO"
	 :variable-pitch-weight normal
	 :variable-pitch-height 1.05
	 :bold-family nil ; use whatever the underlying face has
	 :bold-weight extrabold
	 :italic-family nil
	 :italic-slant italic
	 :line-spacing nil)))

(setq fontaine-presets
      '((regular
	 :default-height 100)
	(medium
	 :default-weight semilight
	 :default-height 140)
	(large
	 :default-weight semilight
	 :default-height 180
	 :bold-weight extrabold)
	(t ; our shared fallback properties
	 :default-family "Iosevka Comfy"
	 :default-weight normal
	 ;; :default-height 100
	 :fixed-pitch-family nil ; falls back to :default-family
	 :fixed-pitch-weight nil ; falls back to :default-weight
	 :fixed-pitch-height 1.0
	 :variable-pitch-family "FiraGO"
	 :variable-pitch-weight normal
	 :variable-pitch-height 1.05
	 :bold-family nil ; use whatever the underlying face has
	 :bold-weight bold
	 :italic-family nil
	 :italic-slant italic
	 :line-spacing nil)))

The t preset does not need to explicitly cover all properties. It can rely on the aforementioned “implicit fallback values” to further reduce its verbosity (though the user can always write all properties if they intend to change their values). We then have this transformation:

;; The verbose form
(setq fontaine-presets
      '((regular
	 :default-height 100)
	(medium
	 :default-weight semilight
	 :default-height 140)
	(large
	 :default-weight semilight
	 :default-height 180
	 :bold-weight extrabold)
	(t ; our shared fallback properties
	 :default-family "Iosevka Comfy"
	 :default-weight normal
	 ;; :default-height 100
	 :fixed-pitch-family nil ; falls back to :default-family
	 :fixed-pitch-weight nil ; falls back to :default-weight
	 :fixed-pitch-height 1.0
	 :variable-pitch-family "FiraGO"
	 :variable-pitch-weight normal
	 :variable-pitch-height 1.05
	 :bold-family nil ; use whatever the underlying face has
	 :bold-weight bold
	 :italic-family nil
	 :italic-slant italic
	 :line-spacing nil)))

;; The concise one which relies on "implicit fallback values"
(setq fontaine-presets
      '((regular
	 :default-height 100)
	(medium
	 :default-weight semilight
	 :default-height 140)
	(large
	 :default-weight semilight
	 :default-height 180
	 :bold-weight extrabold)
	(t ; our shared fallback properties
	 :default-family "Iosevka Comfy"
	 :default-weight normal
	 :variable-pitch-family "FiraGO"
	 :variable-pitch-height 1.05)))

2.2 Inherit the properties of another named preset

Shared and implicit fallback values for presets.

When defining multiple presets, we may need to duplicate properties and then make tweaks to individual values. Suppose we want to have two distinct presets for presentations: one is for coding related demonstrations and the other for prose. Both must have some common styles, but must define distinct font families each of which is suitable for the given task. In this case, we do not want to fall back to the generic t preset (per the default behaviour) and we also do not wish to duplicate properties manually, potentially making mistakes in the process. Fontaine thus provides a method of inheriting a named preset’s properties by using the :inherit property with a value that references the name of another preset (technically, the car of that list). Here is the idea:

(setq fontaine-presets
      '((regular
	 :default-height 100)
	(code-demo
	 :default-family "Source Code Pro"
	 :default-weight semilight
	 :default-height 170
	 :variable-pitch-family "Sans"
	 :bold-weight extrabold)
	(prose-demo
	 :inherit code-demo ; copy the `code-demo' properties
	 :default-family "Sans"
	 :variable-pitch-family "Serif"
	 :default-height 220)
	(t
	 :default-family "Monospace"
	 ;; more generic fallback properties here...
	 )))

In this scenario, the regular preset gets all its properties from the t preset. We omit them here in the interest of brevity (see the default value of fontaine-presets and its documentation for the details). In turn, the code-demo specifies more properties and falls back to t for any property not explicitly referenced therein. Finally, the prose-demo copies everything in code-demo, overrides every property it specifies, and falls back to t for every other property.

In the interest of simplicity, Fontaine does not support recursive inheritance. If there is a compelling need for it, we can add it in future versions.

3 Installation

3.1 GNU ELPA package

The package is available as fontaine. Simply do:

M-x package-refresh-contents
M-x package-install

And search for it.

GNU ELPA provides the latest stable release. Those who prefer to follow the development process in order to report bugs or suggest changes, can use the version of the package from the GNU-devel ELPA archive. Read: https://protesilaos.com/codelog/2022-05-13-emacs-elpa-devel/.

3.2 Manual installation

Assuming your Emacs files are found in ~/.emacs.d/, execute the following commands in a shell prompt:

cd ~/.emacs.d

# Create a directory for manually-installed packages
mkdir manual-packages

# Go to the new directory
cd manual-packages

# Clone this repo, naming it "fontaine"
git clone https://git.sr.ht/~protesilaos/fontaine fontaine

Finally, in your init.el (or equivalent) evaluate this:

;; Make Elisp files in that directory available to the user.
(add-to-list 'load-path "~/.emacs.d/manual-packages/fontaine")

Everything is in place to set up the package.

4 Sample configuration

Remember to read the relevant doc strings.

(require 'fontaine)

(setq fontaine-latest-state-file
      (locate-user-emacs-file "fontaine-latest-state.eld"))

;; Iosevka Comfy is my highly customised build of Iosevka with
;; monospaced and duospaced (quasi-proportional) variants as well as
;; support or no support for ligatures:
;; <https://git.sr.ht/~protesilaos/iosevka-comfy>.
;;
;; Iosevka Comfy            == monospaced, supports ligatures
;; Iosevka Comfy Fixed      == monospaced, no ligatures
;; Iosevka Comfy Duo        == quasi-proportional, supports ligatures
;; Iosevka Comfy Wide       == like Iosevka Comfy, but wider
;; Iosevka Comfy Wide Fixed == like Iosevka Comfy Fixed, but wider
(setq fontaine-presets
      '((tiny
	 :default-family "Iosevka Comfy Wide Fixed"
	 :default-height 70)
	(small
	 :default-family "Iosevka Comfy Fixed"
	 :default-height 90)
	(regular
	 :default-height 100)
	(medium
	 :default-height 110)
	(large
	 :default-weight semilight
	 :default-height 140
	 :bold-weight extrabold)
	(presentation
	 :default-weight semilight
	 :default-height 170
	 :bold-weight extrabold)
	(jumbo
	 :default-weight semilight
	 :default-height 220
	 :bold-weight extrabold)
	(t
	 ;; I keep all properties for didactic purposes, but most can be
	 ;; omitted.  See the fontaine manual for the technicalities:
	 ;; <https://protesilaos.com/emacs/fontaine>.
	 :default-family "Iosevka Comfy"
	 :default-weight regular
	 :default-height 100
	 :fixed-pitch-family nil ; falls back to :default-family
	 :fixed-pitch-weight nil ; falls back to :default-weight
	 :fixed-pitch-height 1.0
	 :fixed-pitch-serif-family nil ; falls back to :default-family
	 :fixed-pitch-serif-weight nil ; falls back to :default-weight
	 :fixed-pitch-serif-height 1.0
	 :variable-pitch-family "Iosevka Comfy Duo"
	 :variable-pitch-weight nil
	 :variable-pitch-height 1.0
	 :bold-family nil ; use whatever the underlying face has
	 :bold-weight bold
	 :italic-family nil
	 :italic-slant italic
	 :line-spacing nil)))

;; Recover last preset or fall back to desired style from
;; `fontaine-presets'.
(fontaine-set-preset (or (fontaine-restore-latest-preset) 'regular))

;; The other side of `fontaine-restore-latest-preset'.
(add-hook 'kill-emacs-hook #'fontaine-store-latest-preset)

;; fontaine does not define any key bindings.  This is just a sample that
;; respects the key binding conventions.  Evaluate:
;;
;;     (info "(elisp) Key Binding Conventions")
(define-key global-map (kbd "C-c f") #'fontaine-set-preset)
(define-key global-map (kbd "C-c F") #'fontaine-set-face-font)

4.1 Persist font configurations on theme switch

Themes re-apply face definitions when they are loaded. This is necessary to render the theme. For certain faces, such as bold and italic, it means that their font family may be reset (depending on the particularities of the theme).

To avoid such a problem, we can arrange to restore the current font preset which was applied by fontaine-set-preset. Fontaine provides the command fontaine-apply-current-preset. It can either be called interactively after loading a theme or be assigned to a hook that is ran at the post load-theme phase.

Some themes that provide a hook are the modus-themes and ef-themes (both by Protesilaos), so we can use something like:

(add-hook 'modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook #'fontaine-apply-current-preset))

If both packages are used, we can either write two lines of add-hook or do this:

;; Persist font configurations while switching themes (doing it with
;; my `modus-themes' and `ef-themes' via the hooks they provide).
(dolist (hook '(modus-themes-after-load-theme-hook ef-themes-post-load-hook))
  (add-hook hook #'fontaine-apply-current-preset))

Themes must specify a hook that is called by their relevant commands at the post-theme-load phase. This can also be done in a theme-agnostic way:

;; Set up the `after-enable-theme-hook'
(defvar after-enable-theme-hook nil
  "Normal hook run after enabling a theme.")

(defun run-after-enable-theme-hook (&rest _args)
  "Run `after-enable-theme-hook'."
  (run-hooks 'after-enable-theme-hook))

(advice-add 'enable-theme :after #'run-after-enable-theme-hook)

And then simply use that hook:

(add-hook 'after-enable-theme-hook #'fontaine-apply-current-preset)

5 Acknowledgements

Fontaine is meant to be a collective effort. Every bit of help matters.

Author/maintainer
Protesilaos Stavrou.
Contributions to the code or manual
Christopher League, Eli Zaretskii, Florent Teissier, Terry F. Torrey.
Ideas and user feedback
Joe Higton, Ted Reed.

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H. Include an unaltered copy of this License.
I. Preserve the section Entitled "History", Preserve its Title, and add
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   or to conflict in title with any Invariant Section.
O. Preserve any Warranty Disclaimers.

If the Modified Version includes new front-matter sections or
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These titles must be distinct from any other section titles.

You may add a section Entitled "Endorsements", provided it contains
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You may add a passage of up to five words as a Front-Cover Text, and a
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The author(s) and publisher(s) of the Document do not by this License
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5. COMBINING DOCUMENTS

You may combine the Document with other documents released under this
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Make the same adjustment to the section titles in the list of
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In the combination, you must combine any sections Entitled "History"
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6. COLLECTIONS OF DOCUMENTS

You may make a collection consisting of the Document and other
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You may extract a single document from such a collection, and
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7. AGGREGATION WITH INDEPENDENT WORKS

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When the Document is included in an aggregate, this License does not
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If the Cover Text requirement of section 3 is applicable to these
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If a section in the Document is Entitled "Acknowledgements",
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its Title (section 1) will typically require changing the actual
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9. TERMINATION

You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Document
except as expressly provided under this License.  Any attempt
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will automatically terminate your rights under this License.

However, if you cease all violation of this License, then your license
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Termination of your rights under this section does not terminate the
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10. FUTURE REVISIONS OF THIS LICENSE

The Free Software Foundation may publish new, revised versions of the
GNU Free Documentation License from time to time.  Such new versions
will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in
detail to address new problems or concerns.  See
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/.

Each version of the License is given a distinguishing version number.
If the Document specifies that a particular numbered version of this
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11. RELICENSING

"Massive Multiauthor Collaboration Site" (or "MMC Site") means any
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means any set of copyrightable works thus published on the MMC site.

"CC-BY-SA" means the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0
license published by Creative Commons Corporation, a not-for-profit
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California, as well as future copyleft versions of that license
published by that same organization.

"Incorporate" means to publish or republish a Document, in whole or in
part, as part of another Document.

An MMC is "eligible for relicensing" if it is licensed under this
License, and if all works that were first published under this License
somewhere other than this MMC, and subsequently incorporated in whole or
in part into the MMC, (1) had no cover texts or invariant sections, and
(2) were thus incorporated prior to November 1, 2008.

The operator of an MMC Site may republish an MMC contained in the site
under CC-BY-SA on the same site at any time before August 1, 2009,
provided the MMC is eligible for relicensing.


ADDENDUM: How to use this License for your documents

To use this License in a document you have written, include a copy of
the License in the document and put the following copyright and
license notices just after the title page:

    Copyright (c)  YEAR  YOUR NAME.
    Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
    under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3
    or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation;
    with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts.
    A copy of the license is included in the section entitled "GNU
    Free Documentation License".

If you have Invariant Sections, Front-Cover Texts and Back-Cover Texts,
replace the "with...Texts." line with this:

    with the Invariant Sections being LIST THEIR TITLES, with the
    Front-Cover Texts being LIST, and with the Back-Cover Texts being LIST.

If you have Invariant Sections without Cover Texts, or some other
combination of the three, merge those two alternatives to suit the
situation.

If your document contains nontrivial examples of program code, we
recommend releasing these examples in parallel under your choice of
free software license, such as the GNU General Public License,
to permit their use in free software.

Old versions

fontaine-0.4.1.tar.lz2022-Oct-0728.0 KiB
fontaine-0.4.0.tar.lz2022-Sep-0728.0 KiB
fontaine-0.3.0.tar.lz2022-Jul-0625.3 KiB
fontaine-0.2.3.tar.lz2022-Jun-1023.3 KiB
fontaine-0.2.2.tar.lz2022-May-1318.6 KiB
fontaine-0.2.1.tar.lz2022-May-1018.6 KiB
fontaine-0.2.0.tar.lz2022-May-0918.6 KiB
fontaine-0.1.1.tar.lz2022-Apr-2916.3 KiB
fontaine-0.1.0.tar.lz2022-Apr-2814.5 KiB

News

This document contains the release notes for each tagged commit on the project's main git repository: https://git.sr.ht/~protesilaos/fontaine.

The newest release is at the top. For further details, please consult the manual: https://protesilaos.com/emacs/fontaine.

Version 1.0.0 on 2023-02-11

Fontaine has been in a stable state for several months now. I am thus increasing the major version number to reflect this fact. Otherwise, this is a small release with only one sizeable addition.

Inherit the properties of another named preset

Preset font configuration can now optionally inherit (and thus extend) the properties of another named preset.

When defining multiple presets, we may need to duplicate properties and then make tweaks to individual values. Suppose we want to have two distinct presets for presentations: one is for coding related demonstrations and the other for prose. Both must have some common styles, but must define distinct font families each of which is suitable for the given task. In this case, we do not want to fall back to the generic t preset (per the default behaviour) and we also do not wish to duplicate properties manually, potentially making mistakes in the process. Fontaine thus provides a method of inheriting a named preset's properties by using the :inherit property with a value that references the name of another preset (technically, the car of that list). Here is the idea:

(setq fontaine-presets
      '((regular
	 :default-height 100)
	(code-demo
	 :default-family "Source Code Pro"
	 :default-weight semilight
	 :default-height 170
	 :variable-pitch-family "Sans"
	 :bold-weight extrabold)
	(prose-demo
	 :inherit code-demo ; copy the `code-demo' properties
	 :default-family "Sans"
	 :variable-pitch-family "Serif"
	 :default-height 220)
	(t
	 :default-family "Monospace"
	 ;; more generic fallback properties here...
	 )))

In this scenario, the regular preset gets all its properties from the t preset. We omit them here in the interest of brevity (see the default value of fontaine-presets and its documentation for the details). In turn, the code-demo specifies more properties and falls back to t for any property not explicitly referenced therein. Finally, the prose-demo copies everything in code-demo, overrides every property it specifies, and falls back to t for every other property.

In the interest of simplicity, Fontaine does not support recursive inheritance. If there is a compelling need for it, we can add it in future versions.

Bug fixes

  • Fixed a faulty setup for the :height attribute of the bold face. Using the commands fontaine-set-preset or fontaine-set-face-font with a prefix argument (C-u with default key bindings) does not produce an error anymore. The prefix argument limits the operation to the current frame.
  • Updated the Commentary section of fontaine.el to use the FONTAINE backronym I have had on my website for a long time. Namely, I changed FONTs Are Irrelevant in Non-graphical Emacs, which was cheating on a few letters, to Fonts, Ornaments, and Neat Typography Are Irrelevant in Non-graphical Emacs. What do you mean this is not a bug fix? 🙃

Version 0.4.0 on 2022-09-07

  • Made it possible for the user option fontaine-presets to cover the fixed-pitch-serif face. This face is used by the default Emacs faces in Info buffers to render inline code elements. A list of

… …