Font with Built-In Syntax Highlighting (2024)

(blog.glyphdrawing.club)

124 points | by california-og 9 hours ago ago

26 comments

  • cyanmagenta 6 hours ago

    I view stuff like this kind of like code that fits into a bootloader or whatever. It’s really more of the technical challenge than to actually solve a problem. The result is much better if you just run a script on your hand-coded file to add syntax highlighting as DOM elements. Still, love seeing stuff like this.

    • michaelsshaw 3 hours ago

      For blogs, I like the site to stay static. This is a neat way to keep it that way. Having your generator do it is better in my opinion though.

  • vbezhenar 7 hours ago

    So script inside web page is bad, but script inside font is good? That's interesting definition of bloat. I'd prefer ordinary webpage using locally installed fonts with explicit JavaScript snippet to highlight keywords.

    • benrutter 7 hours ago

      Unless I missed it, the OP doesn't quote reducing bloat as a motivation- more just working without javascript.

      I took it to be along the lines of an "easier to work with" type motivation, rather than reducing package sizes.

    • blauditore 7 hours ago

      Is it really a script though? IIUC it's more like contextual declaration (e.g. of previous char is X, then use style Y), no?

    • WesolyKubeczek 7 hours ago

      Remember llama.otf?

  • mg 2 hours ago

    This is interesting.

    I have yet to see a good web based text editor with syntax highlighting. They all mess with the native search functionality of the browser. Because they can't just use a textarea for the edit area. With this approach, it would be possible.

    I wonder how usable a Python version of this would be?

    • onion2k 2 hours ago

      I have yet to see a good web based text editor with syntax highlighting.

      I slightly expect you to pull a "no true Scotsman" here and suggest it's actually no good because it doesn't really support mobile browsers very well, but Microsoft's Monaco editor that's driven from VS Code is quite good. https://microsoft.github.io/monaco-editor/

      • mg 2 hours ago

        It seems to have the same problems all of the web based editors I have seen have. Either they capture ctrl+f and take away the native search experience. Or they have a broken search experience. This one is in the latter category.

        When I hit ctrl+f on that page and type "export":

        First it says "1 of 4 matches" but nothing is highlighted.

        When I hit enter, it says "2 of 4 matches" and again, nothing is highlighted.

        When I hit enter again, it says "3 of 4 matches" and the first match is highlighted.

        When I hit enter again, it says "4 of 4 matches" and the second match is highlighted.

    • gethly 2 hours ago

      FYI, IDEs and editors too don't use "textarea". Contenteditable essentially makes the web browser work like editor does.

      • mg 2 hours ago

        Contenteditable plus the CSS Custom Highlight API (which highlights ranges instead of elements) might indeed allow for a good solution. But I have not yet seen an editor that does that.

  • TheRealPomax 14 minutes ago

    > The colors in the HTML snippet above comes from within the font itself, the code is plain text, and requires no JavaScript.

    But then why does the color disappear if I disallow scripts on this page? Instead of your font, now it uses Consolas.

    Are you using JS to load the font in? (if so... web fonts don't need JS to load =)

    • california-og 8 minutes ago

      Most likely because your JS blocker also blocks custom fonts. It works fine without JS.

  • spockz 5 hours ago

    Has anyone tried this with PowerPoint yet? Our org is very PowerPoint centric and always struggle a bit with the workflow for code.

    Copy pasting from IntelliJ does give colours but none of the other niceties such as kerning or litigation. Screenshots are nice visually but a pain to maintain.

    • Sayrus 5 hours ago

      From the article cons section:

      > It only works where OpenType is supported. Fortunately, that's all major browsers and most modern programs. However, something like PowerPoint doesn't support OpenType.

      • spockz an hour ago

        Thank you, I missed that third sentence.

    • layer8 3 hours ago

      *ligatures

      Is kerning a thing for monospace fonts?

      • spockz an hour ago

        Yes, ligatures. No idea where “litigations” came from.

        I think there is still some kerning going on where the individual letters are placed closer together and the entire word has the same width so more spacing in between words.

  • cluckindan 3 hours ago

    Using a variable font with r, g, b axes for each alt would maybe make it possible to change the colors?

  • zX41ZdbW 7 hours ago

    > it breaks when your code goes to a newline. there's no way to keep context line to line...

    This is a blocker for my applications.

  • mock-possum 3 hours ago

    > Works in <textarea> and <input>! Syntax highlighting inside <textarea> has been previously impossible, because textareas and inputs can only contain plain text. This is where the interesting

    Interesting indeed! This bit feels like a neat bit of hackery to keep in my back pocket for sure.

  • Gracana 7 hours ago

    Perhaps you could add this technology to Z80 sans, to get syntax highlighted Z80 disassembly.

    https://github.com/nevesnunes/z80-sans

    • koct9i 4 hours ago

      And add Z80 emulator as well. Just in case.

      • ErroneousBosh 2 hours ago

        Well someone else mentioned llama.ttf which is a font that embeds an llm, using Harfbuzz's WASM engine.

        So, you could absolutely write a WASM Z80 emulator and embed it in a font. Whether or not you could make it do anything useful, or how strong your grip on reality would remain after? I don't know.

        But it wasn't like you were doing anything else on the days between Christmas and New Year, right?

  • exasperaited 2 hours ago

    This is a curious sort of hazy modern mirror image of the world of Sinclair computers, that embedded their BASIC parsing in the keyboard driver — that is to say, it essentially wasn't possible to type a syntactically incorrect BASIC program.