UNIFONTPIC(1) | General Commands Manual | UNIFONTPIC(1) |
unifontpic - Convert GNU Unifont .hex input to a bitmap image of the whole font
unifontpic [-dnnn][-l][-t] [-Pplane] < input-font.hex > output-font.bmp
unifontpic reads a GNU Unifont .hex file from STDIN and writes a two dimensional rendering for each glyph to STDOUT. The output displays an entire Unicode plane of 65,536 glyphs as one large graphic image, showing a grid of 256 glyphs by 256 glyphs as the default, or (at your option) a long version of 16 glyphs across by 4,096 glyphs down.
Input can be one or more files in Unifont .hex format. They don't have to be sorted, as unifontpic will populate the entire glyph array of 65,536 code points before writing its output. The input glyph code points should all be unique, as feeding in duplicate code points will produce unpredictable results. Use unidup (1) on a sorted input of .hex files to guarantee no code point duplication.
Sample usage:
To generate a bitmap that shows combining circles, from the font/ subdirectory:
*.hex GNU Unifont font files
bdfimplode(1), hex2bdf(1), hex2sfd(1), hexbraille(1), hexdraw(1), hexkinya(1), hexmerge(1), johab2ucs2(1), unibdf2hex(1), unibmp2hex(1), unicoverage(1), unidup(1), unifont(5), unifont-viewer(1), unifont1per(1), unifontchojung(1), unifontksx(1), unigencircles(1), unigenwidth(1), unihex2bmp(1), unihex2png(1), unihexfill(1), unihexgen(1), unipagecount(1), unipng2hex(1)
unifontpic was written by Paul Hardy.
unifontpic is Copyright © 2013 Paul Hardy.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
No known bugs exist.
2013 Sep 07 |