


#Noto sans mono download#
The download will include two WOFF, two WOFF2 files, and a stylesheet to use them.
#Noto sans mono full#
If you want to retain the font’s full set of glyphs you will want to disable subsetting too. Google has done a great job on these fonts and you shouldn’t need any of that. You will probably want to enable Expert mode and de-select many of the things that FontSquirrel will do to the font, like truetype hinting, fixing missing glyphs, fixing vertical metrics, etc. Let’s assume you upload the Regular and Bold TTF files to FontSquirrel’s Webfont Generator. You are probably most interested in the Regular and Bold forms. Each one of these contains glyphs to render a wide range of Unicode codepoints in the desired form. Noto Sans Mono comes with 36 variants, such as Regular, Bold, ExtraBold, Light, ExtraLight, Condensed - you get the idea. It’s worth talking about font variants for a moment.
#Noto sans mono generator#
If your read of the SIL Open Font License is different, or if you are willing to change the name of the font and use it, you can use their Webfont Generator to upload the desired TTF variants you’ve downloaded from the Google Noto Sans Mono page. Noto Sans Mono is under the same license. Noto Sans is licensed under the SIL Open Font License, which FontSquirrel reads as preventing them from providing a webfont version of it. Noto Sans Mono is not available from FontSquirrel, although their Noto Sans page says they can’t provide the font due to licensing restrictions. Note that Noto Mono is deprecated in preference to Noto Sans Mono. Note that by default FontSquirrel will provide you with the Western Latin subset of the font, so if you want the full thing disable subsetting. Noto Mono is available for download as a webfont from FontSquirrel.


Frustratingly, while Noto Sans is available directly from the Google Font CDN, neither of the two Mono fonts are included. The Google Noto font family is an obvious candidate as it contains two monospace fonts: Noto Mono and Noto Sans Mono. Part of that work is finding a monospace proofreading font that covers set of Unicode codepoints we need and is, or can be made available as, a webfont.
#Noto sans mono code#
Over at Distributed Proofreaders we’re busy working to convert the site code over to Unicode from Latin-1.
