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fonts.mss
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fonts.mss
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/*
About fonts:
Noto is a font family that wants to cover most of Unicode with a harmonic
design across various scripts. We use Noto for most text and some fallback fonts.
By order:
1. Noto Sans:
Noto Sans is available for most scripts and it is used as a first choice. Noto
provides also a Serif style for quite a few scripts, Rashi for Hebrew, Nask
for Arabic. This CartoCSS style uses the Sans style because it’s the most
consistent and the most legible choice. Also, the other styles might redefine
parts of the Latin script, which is not desired.
Where available the UI version of the fonts – which provides tighter vertical
metrics – is used. We intent to have all scripts of Noto in
our list except dead (historic) scripts of whom we assume that they are not
used in “name” tags in OSM. Most of the list is in alphabetical order,
but there are some exceptions.
- Noto Sans is before all other fonts
- Noto Sanc CJK JP is placed behind the other fonts because it redefines the
Latin script, and their design should not overwrite the standard design.
The used CJK font covers all CJK languages, but defaults to the Japanese
glyph style if various glyph styles are available. We have to default to one
of JP, KR, SC, TC because this style has no knowledge about what language the
“names” tag contains. As in Korea Han characters are not so widely used, it is
better to default to either Chinese or Japanese. As Chinese exists in the two
variants SC/TC, it won’t be a uniform rendering anyway. So we default to
Japanese. However, this choice stays somewhat arbitrary and subjective.
2. Noto fonts that are not available in a Sans style:
The old Noto Sans Tibetan has been renamed to Noto Serif
Tibetan in 2015, since then only Noto Serif Tibetan gets updated.
Noto provides two variants of Emoji: Noto Color Emoji and Noto Emoji. The
colour variant is a SVG flavoured OpenType font that contains coloured emojis.
This is not useful in cartography, so we use the “normal” monochromatic
Noto Emoji.
3. Fallback fonts:
Hanazono covers almost all CJK characters, even in Unicode Plane 2.
*/
/* Use vendored fonts. This allows for more recent versions and better coverage */
Map {
font-directory: url('fonts');
}
/*
A regular style.
*/
@book-fonts: "Noto Sans Regular",
"Noto Sans Adlam Unjoined Regular",
"Noto Sans Arabic UI Regular",
"Noto Sans Armenian Regular",
"Noto Sans Balinese Regular",
"Noto Sans Bamum Regular",
"Noto Sans Batak Regular",
"Noto Sans Bengali UI Regular",
"Noto Sans Buginese Regular",
"Noto Sans Buhid Regular",
"Noto Sans Canadian Aboriginal Regular",
"Noto Sans Chakma Regular",
"Noto Sans Cham Regular",
"Noto Sans Cherokee Regular",
"Noto Sans Coptic Regular",
"Noto Sans Devanagari UI Regular",
"Noto Sans Ethiopic Regular",
"Noto Sans Georgian Regular",
"Noto Sans Gujarati UI Regular",
"Noto Sans Gurmukhi UI Regular",
"Noto Sans Hanunoo Regular",
"Noto Sans Hebrew Regular",
"Noto Sans Javanese Regular",
"Noto Sans Kannada UI Regular",
"Noto Sans Kayah Li Regular",
"Noto Sans Khmer UI Regular",
"Noto Sans Lao UI Regular",
"Noto Sans Lepcha Regular",
"Noto Sans Limbu Regular",
"Noto Sans Lisu Regular",
"Noto Sans Malayalam UI Regular",
"Noto Sans Mandaic Regular",
"Noto Sans Mongolian Regular",
"Noto Sans Myanmar UI Regular",
"Noto Sans New Tai Lue Regular",
"Noto Sans NKo Regular",
"Noto Sans Ol Chiki Regular",
"Noto Sans Oriya UI Regular",
"Noto Sans Osage Regular",
"Noto Sans Osmanya Regular",
"Noto Sans Samaritan Regular",
"Noto Sans Saurashtra Regular",
"Noto Sans Shavian Regular",
"Noto Sans Sinhala UI Regular",
"Noto Sans Sundanese Regular",
"Noto Sans Symbols Regular",
"Noto Sans Symbols2 Regular",
"Noto Sans Syriac Regular",
"Noto Sans Tagalog Regular",
"Noto Sans Tagbanwa Regular",
"Noto Sans Tai Le Regular",
"Noto Sans Tai Tham Regular",
"Noto Sans Tai Viet Regular",
"Noto Sans Tamil UI Regular",
"Noto Sans Telugu UI Regular",
"Noto Sans Thaana Regular",
"Noto Sans Thai UI Regular",
"Noto Sans Tifinagh Regular",
"Noto Sans Vai Regular",
"Noto Sans Yi Regular",
"Noto Sans CJK JP Regular",
"Noto Serif Tibetan Regular",
"Noto Emoji Regular",
"HanaMinA Regular", "HanaMinB Regular";
/*
A bold style is available for almost all scripts. Bold text is heavier than
regular text and can be used for emphasis. Fallback is a regular style.
*/
@bold-fonts: "Noto Sans Bold",
"Noto Sans Adlam Unjoined Bold",
"Noto Sans Arabic UI Bold",
"Noto Sans Armenian Bold",
"Noto Sans Balinese Bold",
"Noto Sans Bamum Bold",
"Noto Sans Bengali UI Bold",
"Noto Sans Canadian Aboriginal Bold",
"Noto Sans Cham Bold",
"Noto Sans Cherokee Bold",
"Noto Sans Devanagari UI Bold",
"Noto Sans Ethiopic Bold",
"Noto Sans Georgian Bold",
"Noto Sans Gujarati UI Bold",
"Noto Sans Gurmukhi UI Bold",
"Noto Sans Hebrew Bold",
"Noto Sans Javanese Bold",
"Noto Sans Kannada UI Bold",
"Noto Sans Kayah Li Bold",
"Noto Sans Khmer UI Bold",
"Noto Sans Lao UI Bold",
"Noto Sans Lisu Bold",
"Noto Sans Malayalam UI Bold",
"Noto Sans Myanmar UI Bold",
"Noto Sans Ol Chiki Bold",
"Noto Sans Oriya UI Bold",
"Noto Sans Sinhala UI Bold",
"Noto Sans Sundanese Bold",
"Noto Sans Symbols Bold",
"Noto Sans Syriac Black",
"Noto Sans Tai Tham Bold",
"Noto Sans Tamil UI Bold",
"Noto Sans Telugu UI Bold",
"Noto Sans Thaana Bold",
"Noto Sans Thai UI Bold",
"Noto Sans CJK JP Bold",
"Noto Serif Tibetan Bold",
"Noto Emoji Bold",
@book-fonts;
/*
Italics are only available for the (Latin-Greek-Cyrillic) base font, not the other scripts.
(Apart from that, only Noto Tamil has an Italic style, but just for Serif, not for Sans.)
For a considerable number of labels this style will make no difference to the regular style.
*/
@oblique-fonts: "Noto Sans Italic", @book-fonts;