WebProNews

Tag: web fonts

  • Source Code Pro: Adobe’s New Fonts For Coders

    Source Code Pro: Adobe’s New Fonts For Coders

    Adobe announced a lot of new Web development tools today at its Create The Web keynote. The company hopes developers and creators will use its newly Edge tools to push the Web forward. Two of the Edge tools announced today were Edge Web Fonts and Typekit, both of which feature open source fonts. Joining the launch of these tools, Adobe is also releasing new open source fonts.

    Adobe announced today the release of its second open source typeface family, Source Code Pro. The new monospaced typeface family was designed by the Paul Hunt and the Adobe Type team. He based his work on the previously released Sources Sans Pro.

    Hunt says that the design of Source Code Pro was inspired by his own desire to have a “coding font that [he] would want to use [himself].” He goes on to say that he had to adapt his design to avoid the problems that usually plague monospace text. Most of the work went into differentiating characters that looked similar to one another. He also worked to make the letters and numbers flow without tiring the eyes of coders.

    Unfortunately, he will not be able to release bitmaps for the new fonts. He felt that it was more prudent to target rendering antialiased rendering environments since so much work is done on devices that feature Retina Displays, Clear Type and other font smoothing options.

    As with all open source projects, the new Source Code Pro fonts are available for free. you can get them right now at Adobe’s SourceForge page. Adobe also encourages developers and designers to clone and fork the project on GitHub. The fonts are also available on various Web portals like Edge Web Fonts, TypeKit and Google Web Fonts.

  • Google Adds Web Font Support to Google Docs

    Google Adds Web Font Support to Google Docs

    Google announced today that Google Docs now supports web fonts using the Google Font API. To start off, there are six new fonts available.

    "This is just the beginning of fonts in Google Docs," says software engineer Jeremie Lenfant-Engelmann. "We added six new fonts today and we’re already testing our next batch. You’ll see many more new fonts over the next few months. And because Google Docs uses web fonts, you’ll never need to install a new font: when you load your document, the latest set of fonts will always be there, ready to use."

    The six new fonts include: Droid Serif, Droid Sans, Calibri, Cambria, Consolas and Corsiva. "Right now our font support covers most Latin and Western European character sets. However, we’ll be adding web fonts for other languages (like Hebrew and Greek) soon.," says Lenfant-Engelmann.

    Google Docs Fonts

    Google is doing a lot of new things with Google Docs. These include new collaboration features and spreadsheet printing. Google announced this week that 3 Million Businesses Have "Gone Google".