fonts/Hasklig - The NetBSD Packages Collection

Code font with monospaced ligatures

Programming languages are limited to relatively few characters. As
a result, combined character operators surfaced quite early, such
as the widely used arrow (->), comprised of a hyphen and greater
sign. It looks like an arrow if you know the analogy and squint a
bit.

Composite glyphs are problematic in languages such as Haskell which
utilize these complicated operators (=> -< >>= etc.) extensively.
The readability of such complex code improves with pretty printing.
Academic articles featuring Haskell code often use lhs2tex to
achieve an appealing rendering, but it is of no use when programming.

Some Haskellers have resorted to Unicode symbols, which are valid
in the ghc. However they are one-character-wide and therefore
eye-strainingly small. Furthermore, when displayed as substitutes
to the underlying multi-character representation, as vim2hs does,
the characters go out of alignment.

Hasklig solves the problem the way typographers have always solved
ill-fitting characters which co-occur often: ligatures. The underlying
code stays the same - only the representation changes.  Not only
can multi-character glyphs be rendered more vividly, other problematic
things in monospaced fonts, such as spacing can be corrected.

Build dependencies

pkgtools/mktools pkgtools/cwrappers

Runtime dependencies

fonts/ttmkfdir2

Binary packages

OSArchitectureVersion
NetBSD 10.0aarch64Hasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0aarch64Hasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0aarch64ebHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0aarch64ebHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0alphaHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0alphaHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0earmv6hfHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0earmv6hfHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0earmv7hfHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0earmv7hfHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0i386Hasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0i386Hasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0powerpcHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0powerpcHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0powerpcHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0powerpcHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0sparc64Hasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0sparc64Hasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0sparcHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0sparcHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0x86_64Hasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 10.0x86_64Hasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 9.0aarch64Hasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 9.0earmv6hfHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 9.0earmv6hfHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 9.0earmv6hfHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 9.0earmv7hfHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 9.0earmv7hfHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 9.0i386Hasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 9.0i386Hasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 9.0m68kHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 9.0powerpcHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 9.0powerpcHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 9.0powerpcHasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 9.0sparc64Hasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 9.0sparc64Hasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 9.0x86_64Hasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 9.0x86_64Hasklig-1.1.tgz
NetBSD 9.3x86_64Hasklig-1.1.tgz

Binary packages can be installed with the high-level tool pkgin (which can be installed with pkg_add) or pkg_add(1) (installed by default). The NetBSD packages collection is also designed to permit easy installation from source.

Available build options

(none)

Known vulnerabilities

The pkg_admin audit command locates any installed package which has been mentioned in security advisories as having vulnerabilities.

Please note the vulnerabilities database might not be fully accurate, and not every bug is exploitable with every configuration.


Problem reports, updates or suggestions for this package should be reported with send-pr.