Howeverwhat it gives me is plain Roboto. If I change the "Condensed" one to use font-family "Roboto Condensed" it works ... and that makes sense because apparently chrome is late to adopt font-stretch. However, changing the font-family to "roboto condensed" doesn't use the lighter font-weight (which is 300), it stays at 400. Even if I change the font-weight to 300, which it specifically has, it will remain at 400 (switching in the console between 200, 300 and 400 has no effect at all). I have to put "Roboto Condensed Light" specifically, to get the light font-weight.
Roboto and Roboto Condensed are provided as two separate font families by Google Fonts, so if you want to use the condensed version, you will have to declare font-family: "Roboto Condensed" as the condensed variant is not included in the Roboto font family.
Roboto Condensed has also a more limited amount of font weights available: 300, 400 and 700 compared to Roboto's 100, 300, 400, 700 and 900. Simply speaking, using font weight of 100 and 900 will not work with Roboto Condensed, and will fallback to the nearest possible font-weight.
I want to use Roboto Thin Google Webfont (weight 100) in a slightly tweaked version of the hyde-hyde theme. Google lists Roboto Thin and Thin Italic as included in the Roboto family, but the thinnest rendered appears to be weight 300 even though the CSS calls for 100.
Is it possible to include Roboto TTF font files in the Hugo directory structure? If so, where should they be put and what would be the URL to access them? Would just the URL for the Roboto normal file adequate for accessing all the other weights?
Roboto (/roʊˈbɒt.oʊ/)[2] is a neo-grotesque sans-serif typeface family developed by Google as the system font for its mobile operating system Android, and released in 2011 for Android 4.0 "Ice Cream Sandwich".[3]
Roboto Bold is the default font in Unreal Engine 4, and in Kodi.[6] Roboto Condensed is used to display Information on European versions of Nintendo Switch packaging, including physical releases of games.
Android's previous system typeface, Droid Sans, was designed for the low-resolution displays of early Android devices, and did not display well in larger, higher-resolution screens of later models.[9][10] It was decided that a more modern typeface, designed from scratch, was needed for the newer displays.
The new typeface, Roboto, was designed entirely in-house by Christian Robertson who previously had released an expanded Ubuntu Titling font through his personal type foundry Betatype.[11][12] The font was officially made available for free download on January 12, 2012, on the newly launched Android Design website.
Compared to the humanist sans-serif Droid Sans, Roboto belongs to the neo-grotesque genre of sans-serif typefaces. It includes Thin, Light, Regular, Medium, Bold and Black weights with matching oblique styles rather than true italics. It also includes condensed styles in Light, Regular and Bold, also with matching oblique designs.
Roboto Slab is a slab serif font based on Roboto. It was introduced in March 2013, as the default font in Google's note-taking service Google Keep.[18] (The font was changed to the sans-serif Roboto in 2018.)[19] It is available in four weights: thin, light, regular and bold. However, no oblique versions were released for it. In November 2019, the typeface was updated and added 5 new weights: Extra-Light, Medium, Semi-Bold, Extra-Bold and Black, and a variable font axis ranging from 100 to 900. It also was modified with some characteristics from the sans-serif Roboto and to slightly resemble most slab-serif typefaces, such as "R", "K", "k", "g", "C", "S", etc.
Released in 2022, Roboto Flex is the variable font version of Roboto.[20] Roboto Flex has 12 adjustable axes, including optical size.[21] Notably, the static font version of Roboto does not have weights 200 (Extra Light), 600 (Semi Bold), and 800 (Extra Bold), which can be achieved by Roboto Flex via the weight axis. Roboto Flex supports Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic characters.
Roboto Flex was still not used as the default system font in Android, potentially replacing classic Roboto. Meanwhile, Google started to use Google Sans Text as the default system font for Android system apps (e.g. Settings) in Google Pixel devices, following other Android OEMs who introduce custom fonts to their system apps.
Inter was designed in 2017 by Rasmus Andersson who wanted a font that was easier to read on computer screens than Roboto while retaining its vertical proportions.[24] Earlier versions of Inter (then "Interface" and "Inter UI") included glyphs and followed the vertical glyph metrics (ascender and descender) from Roboto, while Roboto glyphs were included as a fallback for characters which have not been (re-)designed in Inter. Inter changed its vertical glyph metrics since 2018, making it different from that of Roboto.[25]
Due to this condition, the typeface had to be released in two combined licenses: the SIL Open Font License for original glyph designs for Inter and Apache License for the fallback Roboto glyphs and outlines. This exception was removed in 2020 after Roboto was re-licensed from Apache to OFL.[26]
Inter also has an experimental "Display" version, a font which has less letter spacing and has linear endings of letters.[27] Another variant with similar purpose, Inter Tight, is specifically designed for Google Workspace and other applications that do not support control over letter spacing.[28] The latter variant shares the same glyph shapes as Inter, while the former contains redesigned glyphs which will be introduced in a future version of Inter.
Piboto is a forked version of Roboto, including the original character styles as used before the 2014 redesign. It is specifically designed and currently the system font of Raspberry Pi OS (then Raspbian) as part of their desktop UI redesign.[29]
I would like to use the Roboto font in my perspective views, but I keep getting 404 Not Found responses on the requests for the font. In the gateway logs, I can see the following error from the ThemeManager and warning from the AbstractAssetManager:
To circumvent this issue, I have also tried to add the custom css files following the instructions from this Ignition Exchange: Ignition Exchange Inductive Automation
But instead of creating a whole new theme file as well, I imported the new files into the light.css file so that the changes would reflect in the default light theme. While I can create and use e.g. new CSS variables, the Roboto font still won't work.
Overriding or adapting themes is easy by leveraging the "C" in CSS (Cascading Style Sheet). Simply add your own CSS import pointing to your own custom style sheet containing the rulesets that you want to override or adapt AFTER any existing imports. For example, to override something declared in IA's owned light theme, add your own import in the light.css entry file like so:
Sooo the fonts directory also contained a couple of Roboto font files, basically a subset from the ones in the fonts/Roboto folder. I guess this is what led to the AbstractAssetManager duplicate key error, because removing those files seems to have fixed the 404s and I don't see that error popping up anymore. Hope it stays working!
Recently I needed to edit one of my schedules in adobe acrobat DC, and it contained a specific font that I think is created by google or something: Roboto Light. Here is the message I got when I tried to edit:
I would really like to edit in the Roboto light font, is there a way to install the font onto my system? The Minion Pro font looks very different in comparison to the existing one. Basically, how do I add a font into Adobe acrobat DC? Is there a native way to do it, do I have to first install the font in my system itself, or do I need to use any 3rd party add-ins?
Bottom line is that it should be easy to edit your text in a PDF file in which contents are formatted in members of the Roboto font family. Make sure you restart Acrobat after downloading and installing the Roboto fonts on your system. You don't need any third party plug-ins!
I am using Adobe Illustator to make some SVGs. I need the font-family to be ONLY roboto for the web. However every time I save it shows other roboto fonts like Roboto-Regular and Roboto-Light. I tried installing the roboto web font from google fonts and restarted illustrator.
The simple solution is to just find and replace in my text editor however as I am going to be doing this in a lot in the future I would like to figure out the cause/real solution to make it just roboto.
You need to add extra font setting to make Firefox select a specific variant.All Roboto fonts are seen as one family and the correct variant is chosen based on other settings (light might be: font-weight:300; or font-weight:lighter;)
PS: Not really sure what information I could give or not give to help, but if you'd like to have a poke around, all of my code is sitting here - the bugged view is "ExportPDF" and the template is export.html in the "online_cv" app_dir: -Summer-Project-Blog
That's interesting -- it sound like Weasyprint isn't loading the font from the link, which does surprise me a bit. However, if you download the TTF version of Roboto then you can install it into your PythonAnywhere account.
Yeah I tried that with Segoe UI as that was the default bootstrap font being used. Tried it again with the roboto ttfs, and sure enough, fc-cache -f -v gives the result /home/Kirkmania/.fonts: caching, new cache contents: 16 fonts, 0 dirs, but WeasyPrint still isn't using it. I don't know what else to do! Maybe I need to explore the WeasyPrint code and see what I can understand.
OK, that's promising -- the fonts are definitely installed where weasyprint should be able to get hold of them. Are there any warning messages appearing in your website's server or error log when you access the view?
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