An experimental 12-segment display, and my 100th published Fontstruction. It's the calculator of yesterday's future!
This one belongs to a small family called Calculatrix.
This font is monospaced to ensure segments are always where they "should" be (as if the text were printed on one giant display).
Calculator font with a 7-segment display. This should bring many of you back to school, but in a good way, I hope.
This one belongs to a small family called Calculatrix.
I've allowed "MWmw+" to break the grid because they were impossible to render otherwise...
Did/do you ever use oldschool calculators to write funny messages? Post your best calculator words in a comment! :D
24-segment display. This one belongs to a small family called Calculatrix.
Like Calculatrix 12, this one is spaced so that every segment appears in its proper place, as if the text were being rendered on one giant display. (If using this in your own software, you will want to check the line spacing as it can vary depending on the software.)
I suppose this font could be used for weaving or embroidery work, as well... it has that look about it...
TIP: Try zooming out while already at Pixel size!
I was making some new bricks to add to Brick Basket when the idea of a segmented display made from composites occurred to me. The result is this experimental 25-segment display.
This achieves some interesting "double line"/"folded line" effects. It also gets some pecuilar distortions at smaller sizes.
A pixel-for-pixel recreation of the font on TI-83 and black and white TI-84 graphing calculators, remapped to Unicode. There are lots of TI fonts already on FontStruct, but this is the only one that features the full set of 249 characters, including semigraphics characters. Everything that doesn't have a Unicode codepoint has been mapped to the Private Use Area starting at U+E000.
2023 UPDATE: Fixed line height and period/comma spacing. Found a few more homes for private-use characters as well.
Source for characters: http://tibasicdev.wikidot.com/83lgfont
This is the default font for TI-nspire Ndless. I used nTxt to type out the letters and copy them onto here. The unsupported characters (that might be supported but I can't type them) I just left blank.
An attempt to make a Calculatrix with both squares and hexagonal segments. The result doesn't really fit in with the others, but it has a harsh and highly technical appearance about it which I like.
More glyphs later, maybe?
The font based off of my graphing calculator i bought for school. Unfortunately, I'm in middle school, so i can't take it back to school, but at least it's a good font resource. Most of the characters were receated from the "program" app's symbol menu. THE THING COST $43 BUCKS!!! You should expect a lot of MATH characters...
This is an enhanced version of the retro font you see on old games. Still WIP. The squares are just placeholders and will be removed shortly. I hope to make this have more characters than any other fonts in the future (this might take a while). This font can be used in retro-style games, computer graphics, or anything else you can imagine. This font is pixelated, meaning it is lightweight and easy to port to many devices.
This is a clone of Ndless Default Font