Licensed copies of Scala and Scala Sans in OpenType format are available from the Office of University Communications. These copies are for the use of University faculty and staff producing publications that represent the University. (At this time, Scala fonts are not available for use on University websites. See the section on web typography.)
The list below contains recommended tracking values for Adobe InDesign for each of the Scala family fonts. When using small caps, the tracking values can be adjusted when the typeface is used at very large sizes in order to maintain the proper proportional relationships.
scala regular font free download
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FF Scala is a complete typeface family with small caps, ligatures and text figures or lower-case numbers, as well as condensed regular and bold fonts. In 1996, a decorative variety of capitals titled FF Scala Jewel[1] was released. These show influence of Dutch Baroque decorative capitals. A companion sans-serif version, FF Scala Sans was released in 1993, making Scala a font superfamily of matching designs. This makes Scala a very popular font in book design and fine printing.[2]
FF Scala used to be the house typeface for the prominent Dutch newspaper Algemeen Dagblad and for KLM Royal Dutch Airlines. It is also used on the logo of the United States' Department of Homeland Security, which uses the similar Joanna as a corporate font.[3]
Webfonts can be used on a single domain. Agencies responsible for multiple websites, for example web design agencies or hosting providers, may not share a single webfont license across multiple websites.
Every time the webpage using the webfont kit is loaded (i.e, the webfont kit CSS which holds the font-face rule is called) the counting system counts a single pageview for each webfont within the webfont kit.
We'll supply a kit containing webfonts that can be used within digital ads, such as banner ads. This kit may be shared with third parties who are working on your behalf to produce the ad creatives, however you are wholly responsible for it.
An Electronic Doc license is based on the number of publications in which the font is used. Each issue counts as a separate publication. Regional or format variations don't count as separate publications.
Although Scala is clearly influenced by elements from other typefaces, it has managed to keep a style of its own. The slab serifs were originally made to print without jaggies on a 300 dpi laserprinter. The dark colour and low contrast worked to prevent the thin parts from breaking up (most of the early PostScript fonts are too thin). For the same reason Scala Italic has strong serifs. The almost exaggerated length of its serifs gives Scala italic a very strong rhythm.
In the both Scala and Scala Sans non-lining or old style figures are, as a matter of policy, provided in the standard character set and in the Caps set. The special Lining Figures fonts (LF fonts) provide the lining figures.
The Caps sets have some special features. The normal capitals are included in the Caps set, so for example when typing a name in small caps with starting capitals, one does not have to change the font. Some characters in the Caps set ( & ? ! ) are specially designed to match the size of the small caps.
Another irritant is that there are 102 rightward arrows in Unicode and many look alike at normal screen resolutions. In any case nobody uses them and they should probably go away in Scala 3, now that ligature fonts like Fira Code are available and supported by all the reasonable editors.
The main point is again from Ichoran on practicality when actually coding. This is where a Unicode Arrows scalafmt rewrite rule can come into play. Type as you like and let scalafmt take care of the conversion.
Mario,
it seems it would be sufficient if your editor supported the desired visualization of regular arrows. This way the code base need not contain any fancy symbol and you still have what you desire, right?
Image Generator is a service that allows you to fully customize your texts andvisualize them in various formats. This user-friendly tool enables you to adjustfont style, font size, background color, font color, and your text content.
Image Generator enables you to customize the background and font colors to makeyourtexts visually appealing. You can choose your preferred colors or utilize colorpalettes to achieve specific color harmonies. This allows you to adjust yourtextsto reflect the identity of your projects or brand.
Designing a book based on the layout used in one of Taschen's architectural series which featured Scala Sans for body text. Recreated the layout initially using Scala Sans which I'm enamored here - it seems to be the perfect "voice" for the author and subject matter. Of course Taschen's designers created a perfectly proportioned look amongst all the elements, worthy of study and emulation, but what I have is obviously too derivative, and I've begun customizing, starting with a similar font.
Calluna Sans seemed to fit the bill, after experiments with Martin Majoor's (designer of Scala) and others' designs (Questa Sans, Proxima Nova, Nexus). Calluna is a good approximation of Scala yet with enough distinctive traits to set it apart. However, it's regular weight is a bit heavier on the page and the one light version goes too far. I suppose taking the Calluna 10 pt size I'm using down to 9.8 and slightly decreasing leading is not an option, as it alters the perfectly balanced look between page size and column width that I find the Scala Sans in 10 pt with 14.2 leading here has. Is it not advisable for any reason to use odd point sizes like 9.85 - does it complicate things in any other way?
Hey buddy!
If Adobe InDesign & Photoshop are running the font properly then I guess this ain't the issue with your Windows 10. If Italic/thin/bold variants of other fonts are working properly in XD then you should probably try uninstalling the font and reinstalling it again.
I also discovered another issue: when I compare the Adobe XD design file between MacOS and Windows, the text seems to jump a couple of pixels vertically. I haven't tested this issue with other fonts than the Sanuk font, I hope to test this later this week. Anybody else experienced this issue before?
I have the opposite problem with a different font - Scala Pro. The roman displays in italic in XD only on PC, in XD on a mac it display without any problems. Also, displays correctly on PC in InDesign and Photoshop.
Thank you for reaching out, and sorry for the trouble. We will try our best to investigate the issue. Would you mind confirming from where you've downloaded the font, as it doesn't seem to be available on the font's website?
Using the start does not work reliably, as I have argued in my previous post. Specifically, it does not work with proportional font characters, or with tabs. It would work reliably if we insisted that the start is on its own line, as LPTK suggested. But I find that very hard to read.
A detailed guide for using the collections library is availableat -
lang.org/overviews/collections/introduction.html.Developers looking to extend the collections library can find a descriptionof its architecture at -
lang.org/overviews/core/architecture-of-scala-collections.html.
The most common way to create a collection is to use its companion object asa factory. The three most commonly used collections arescala.collection.Seq, scala.collection.immutable.Set, andscala.collection.immutable.Map.They can be used directly as shown below since their companion objects areall available as type aliases in either the scala package or inscala.Predef. New collections are created like this:
I want to use some fonts for a PhD workplan presentation. There is no template, so font choosing is very flexible. I was asking for Scala Sans because a graphic designer friend of mine suggested it, but I'm completely open to new suggestions.
Other faces from roughly the same category (neo-humanist sans) that are available at no charge include Lucida Sans, Adobe's Frutiger clone Myriad, their recent Source Sans (not really humanist though). And why not check out Microsoft's recent system fonts as well? They include Microsoft's own Frutiger clone Segoe, Corbel, and Candara, a proper neo-humanist sans with a decent italic.
A rather recent addition to the TeX Font Catalogue is Cabin. Two styles, four weights, true small caps. It may not be able to compete with Scala, particularly when it comes to the italics, but out of the fonts from that catalogue, it's as close as you can get.
To get started with a worksheet you can either use the metals.new-scala-filecommand and select Worksheet or create a file called *.worksheet.sc.This format is important since this is what tells Metals that it's meant to betreated as a worksheet and not just a Scala script. Where you create thescript also matters. If you'd like to use classes and values from yourproject, you need to make sure the worksheet is created inside of your sources next to any existing Scala files.directory. You can still create a worksheet in other places, but you willonly have access to the standard library and your dependencies.
Since Metals v0.11.7 it's now possible to run scalafix rules using a specialcommand metals.scalafix-run.This should run all the rules defined in your .scalafix.conf file. All built-in rulesand the community hygiene ones canbe run without any additional settings. However, for all the other rules users need toadd an additional dependency in the metals.scalafixRulesDependencies user setting.Those rules need to be in form of strings such as com.github.liancheng::organize-imports:0.6.0, whichfollows the same convention as coursier dependencies.
We create a String and call the r( ) method on it. Scala implicitly converts the String to a RichString and invokes that method to get an instance of Regex. To find a first match of the regular expression, simply call the findFirstIn() method. If instead of finding only the first occurrence we would like to find all occurrences of the matching word, we can use the findAllIn( ) method and in case there are multiple Scala words available in the target string, this will return a collection of all matching words.
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