NanoMichael / MicroTeX

A dynamic, cross-platform, and embeddable LaTeX rendering library
MIT License
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special.ttf symbols #85

Open LyesSaadi opened 3 years ago

LyesSaadi commented 3 years ago

Hello :grinning:!

Who you gonna call when there's a licensing issue with a font? ~Ghostbusters!~ Me :stuck_out_tongue:!

Anyway, still on my quest to get this packaged in Fedora, I'm looking again into special.ttf!

Anyway, I'm going back to hide in the shadows until my master, © Copyright™, calls for me again.

LyesSaadi commented 3 years ago

@sp1ritCS recreated the Android icon. I swapped \texteuro & \textmu by their appropriate glyphs from lmroman10. I recreated the font to remove the weird bits (like the \texteuro & \textmu glyphs being linked or the undefined glyphs at the end).

We get this as a final Copyright Notice (Note that @sp1ritCS is still not sure about the license of his Android icon recreation):

Copyright (c) 2020 Nano Michael
Copyright (c) 2021 Florian "sp1rit" <sp1rit@disroot.org>
Copyright 1999 2002-2008 LaTeX3 Project
Copyright (c) 1999-2002 Henrik Theiling

This font is subject to the following Licenses:
U+0041 - CC-BY-SA 3.0 - Copyright (c) 2021 Florian "sp1rit" <sp1rit@disroot.org>
U+0042 0+0043 U+0044 - UNKNOWN - UNKNOWN (The TeX font symbols)
U+0045 - Eurosym - Copyright (c) 1999-2002 Henrik Theiling
U+0046 - MIT - Copyright (c) 2020 Nano Michael
U+0065 U+006D - GFSL - Copyright 1999 2002-2008 LaTeX3 Project

I just need the confirmation about the Licenses of the TeX characters' fonts and the sacred parallelogram.

And we get this as a result with the new special.ttf (screenshot from NoteKit): image

And for comparison with the old special.ttf: image

NanoMichael commented 3 years ago

Sorry for the late response... :sweat_smile:

Yes, the parallelogram glyph was created by me :smile: and the cute robot was from Google's Android logo (I can't remember where I found it though...), and the TEX was from Google fonts if I recall correctly, but I can't find it anymore with the attempts of keywords 'android', 'robot', 'machine' and so on to search it.

I believe the day to deprecate these fonts (it is a mess to manage these fonts) is not far (again, please take a look at the openmath branch, although it is not complete, and now only can be compiled by CMake).