13651e15e6
Bumps [requests](https://github.com/psf/requests) from 2.28.1 to 2.31.0. - [Release notes](https://github.com/psf/requests/releases) - [Changelog](https://github.com/psf/requests/blob/main/HISTORY.md) - [Commits](https://github.com/psf/requests/compare/v2.28.1...v2.31.0) --- updated-dependencies: - dependency-name: requests dependency-type: direct:production ... Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com> |
||
---|---|---|
.github | ||
docs/config | ||
src | ||
.dockerignore | ||
.gitignore | ||
Dockerfile | ||
LICENSE | ||
Makefile | ||
poetry.lock | ||
pyproject.toml | ||
README.md |
Glyphance
/ɡlɪfhɑːns/
This is a CLI utility that help reduce load times and bytes by splitting typography files into smaller chunks for different unicode ranges automatically without the tears.
🌈 Features
- Configurable.
- Config driven.
- Docker image, no local install required.
- Outputs
woff2
. - Provides a generated CSS file to simply include.
🚀 Quickstart
Lets assume we want to use 2 variable fonts, one of which has an italic version still as a separate file. Also on our webserver we serve our static fonts from /fonts/
.
- Get the font files
- Write a little config file
glyphance.yaml
and define the font-families (Mulish
andFireCode
e.g.) and their files or variations. - Run it.
- Use the generate font files and CSS.
example/
├── FiraCode-VariableFont_wght.ttf
├── Mulish-Italic-VariableFont_wght.ttf
├── Mulish-VariableFont_wght.ttf
└── glyphance.yaml
# glyphance.yaml
fonts:
'Mulish':
- file: Mulish-VariableFont_wght.ttf
variable: true
css:
font-weight: 200 1000
- file: Mulish-Italic-VariableFont_wght.ttf
variable: true
css:
font-weight: 200 1000
font-style: italic
'FireCode':
- file: FiraCode-VariableFont_wght.ttf
variable: true
css:
font-weight: 300 700
output:
prefix: /fonts/
Run
docker run -v $(pwd)/example:/data cupcakearmy/glyphance
Enjoy
Now you can use the generated font files and import the generated/fonts.css
into your code.
Remember you can modify the
prefix
to match the folder structure of your static files.
example/
├── FiraCode-VariableFont_wght.ttf
├── Mulish-Italic-VariableFont_wght.ttf
├── Mulish-VariableFont_wght.ttf
├── generated
│ ├── 08284d4f696ab68dc7aa21c9c061c534939a3a0c.woff2
│ ├── ...
│ ├── ...
│ ├── f8d95e7f048e130c09015a20689693461cc0dedb.woff2
│ └── fonts.css
└── glyphance.yaml
💡 Inspiration
The idea came mostly at how google fonts subsets their typefaces on Google Fonts.
They split the fonts into multiple blocks of unicode chars, and leverage the unicode-range
property of @font-face
to only deliver the parts of a font that are needed for a website, drastically reducing bytes sent over the wire.
Under the hood it uses the amazing fonttools to do the heavy lifting.
📖 API & Documentation
Config file reference can be found under docs/config.
Example
fonts:
'My Font Familiy':
- file: ./path/relative/to/config/file.ttf|otf|...
variable: true # Whether ist's a variable font or not, defaults to false
css:
font-style: italic # Custom css properties to be added to the css
output:
dir: foo # Directory of the output
prefix: /static/fonts # Prefix to be added to the src URL in the CSS
clean: true # Whether to clean to output directory first
css:
font-weight: 400 # CSS to added to each @font-face. By defaults includes swap, normal weight and style
Provide custom unicode ranges
By default Glyphance uses the same ranges as Google Fonts. However you can customize and specify your own ranges. See the list of possible values.
fonts:
'Mulish':
- file: Mulish-VariableFont_wght.ttf
variable: true
css:
font-weight: 200 1000
- file: Mulish-Italic-VariableFont_wght.ttf
variable: true
css:
font-weight: 200 1000
font-style: italic
'FireCode':
- file: FiraCode-VariableFont_wght.ttf
variable: true
css:
font-weight: 300 700
output:
ranges:
abc: U+0061-0063
numbers: U+0030-0039
dot: U+002E
""