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The requested variant shape does not go too far away from Iosevka's design.
The requested variant does not conflict with any characters in Unicode that Iosevka currently supports.
For each variant you requested, there are at least two monospace/programming fonts created by different designers supported the requested variant. Provide images below.
Please provide your justification here.
The cifrão was unfortunately not accepted as a separate character in Unicode, instead it was treated as a variant of the dollar sign;
It would be nice to be able to use it with Iosevka, maybe as a contextual variant tied to pt-* locales?
I can’t provide monospaced font examples, but I can show you how it used to look on typewriters, before keyboards from English speaking countries took over, and only the one barred dollar sign was available:
This is from a Brazillian Olivetti Lettera 82:
This is from a Portuguese Messa 2000 S:
Brazilian Sears Malibu:
Portuguese HCESAR:
As you can see, the S was a little wider, most likely to avoid ink smudge, but the Wikipedia svg image, based on Gentium, is just a regular S with the double bar;
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
I tried something I hadn’t tried before: composing the cifrão with S + U+20E6:
A tiny bit unbalanced, but the thickness of the lines are right;
It just wouldn’t have the same stylistic options as the regular dollar sign, like the one shown here: slanted bars, smaller S etc.
Also, maybe this has something to do with the font hinting in LibreOffice, but the composed characters look a little blurred, compared to the regular dollar sign;
Please provide your justification here.
The cifrão was unfortunately not accepted as a separate character in Unicode, instead it was treated as a variant of the dollar sign;
It still has both a historical and cultural value for Portuguese speaking countries, and it’s the official symbol for the currency of Cape Verde;
It would be nice to be able to use it with Iosevka, maybe as a contextual variant tied to pt-* locales?
I can’t provide monospaced font examples, but I can show you how it used to look on typewriters, before keyboards from English speaking countries took over, and only the one barred dollar sign was available:
This is from a Brazillian Olivetti Lettera 82:
This is from a Portuguese Messa 2000 S:
Brazilian Sears Malibu:
Portuguese HCESAR:
As you can see, the S was a little wider, most likely to avoid ink smudge, but the Wikipedia svg image, based on Gentium, is just a regular S with the double bar;
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: