I hand-pixeled this font which contains the complete ANSI standard (ASCII + many accented symbols and letters) plus a few wingdings:


*** Fixed link
Please go here to download it: http://0xabad1dea.net/main/doku.php?id=fonts It is a CHR file that you can edit with YY-CHR.

I hope this helps someone on the Playpower project. If you would like a font of a different writing system (other than Chinese, haha) please post it here, preferrably with a link to a chart of all the letters in the order they should go in the font.

Views: 52

Tags: 10dollarcomputer, ansi, chr, font, nes

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Comment by Slo Bu on August 28, 2011 at 5:02pm
That's an awesome font :)  Really like the sad face!  I do miss the 4th of a character blocks from IBM ASCII.  It should be mentioned here that this awesome lady put this font under Public Domain.
Comment by Paulo Silva on March 7, 2010 at 11:46am
humbly, i'm now analysing the gujarati unicode pdf (from unicode.org ), and their characters takes less than 96 characters, but some seems to be accents or combinations, which means all Gujarati characters could be more than 500? :| (anything above 128 characters may be problematic on a 8bit machine like a famiclone)
More problems are:
- is there an official Gujarati (and all other Indian encodings) norm for over 0x7F ascii, like from 80's?
- how would look a monospaced Gujarati 8x8 screenfont?
Comment by Paulo Silva on March 2, 2010 at 4:28am
great contribution! asap, i'll work over this for providing encodes for other languages, based on other ascii-encodings, since this above is only ascii-latin - i remember some old japanese msx machines has kana encoding after chr 0x7F, and arabian msx (al-alamiyah, i think) has arabian-ascii encoding - since Playpower is also strongly focused on India, i don't know if is there some 8bit ascii focusing malayalam, kannada, telugu, hindi and other writings, which i don't know how correct is getting them from unicode encoding... (i don't know if is there some norm)
Comment by Daniel Rehn on February 1, 2010 at 3:44pm
This and your new tutorial are amazing! Great work!
Comment by James Derek Lomas on January 13, 2010 at 10:37am
Wow, it's fantastic! Really great contribution.
Comment by Melissa Elliott on January 12, 2010 at 3:29pm
Whoops, fixed the link ^-^;;....
Comment by David Dahl on January 12, 2010 at 9:43am
Very nice. I like that you've included many western language glyphs and useful symbols.

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