On Sat, 19 Jun 2021 17:49:02 -0400, "G. Branden Robinson" <g.branden.robin...@gmail.com> wrote: > At 2021-06-19T12:39:37-0400, T. Kurt Bond wrote: > > I looked, and couldn't find a free monospace font with both OPEN BOX > > and CIRCLED LATIN CAPITAL LETTER T. [...] > > My search wasn't exhaustive; does anybody else know of one? > > I don't, but you might reach out to Steve White, stevan dot white at > that gmail place. I contacted him earlier this year about some glyph > bugs and he was startlingly responsive. Feel free to tell him that I > urged you contact him.
Ah, he's the maintainer of the GNU FreeFont. I'll do that. > But personally I find the circled T somewhat distracting in spite of its > Unix Room pedigree (when it's manufactured by overstriking, it seems > that the "T" is seldom placed within the circle without ugly overlap). > In groff documentation we already use a right arrow for this purpose; it > is more reliably covered by fonts. > > $ git grep 'indicate a tab' > doc/groff.texi:We have used an arrow @arrow{} in the above to indicate a tab > character. > doc/ms.ms:a right arrow (\[->]) is used to indicate a tab character in the > input. > > Admittedly, I originated both of these instances. That seems reasonable. DejaVuSansMono and FreeMono both have OPEN BOX and RIGHT ARROW. Interestingly, Courier has RIGHT ARROW, but it is a different width than the other characters, even though Courier is a monospaced font. That may not matter for this application. > > Yes, I've run into applications that substitute leading spaces with > > NO-BREAK SPACE, and have been mystified why code cut and pasted from > > there doesn't work anymore, until I finally looked at the actual > > characters and found NO-BREAK SPACE instead of SPACE. > > Yes, this is why I have Vim configured to show me no-break spaces as the > open box glyph. That makes sense. I use whitespace-mode in emacs for that. -- T. Kurt Bond, tkurtb...@gmail.com, https://tkurtbond.github.io/