[RTTY] [3830] NAQP RTTY AA5AU Single Op LP

Joe Subich, W4TV lists at subich.com
Sun Jul 17 12:57:08 PDT 2011


 > Try the Bitstream Vera Sans Mono, or the Onuava font
 > (http://new.myfonts.com/fonts/scriptorium/onuava/) for example.
 > Some fonts identify zeros with a dot in the center, but even they
 > too might be hard to read in the heat of a contest.  The Ornuva's
 > zero's appendage is somewhere between a slash and a dot :-)
 >
 > (http://www.urbanfonts.com/fonts/Onuava.htm)
 >

In the Windows world, Microsoft's Consolas font (typeface) works
very well.  It is a monospaced, slashed zero typeface perfect for
use with logging software and digital programs.  Look carefully,
as you can usually find Consolas available as a free add-on for
various Microsoft applications.

73,

    ... Joe, W4TV


On 7/17/2011 3:37 PM, Kok Chen wrote:
>
> On Jul 17, 2011, at 11:49 AM, iw1ayd wrote:
>
>> Much better with the slashed zero font, if it could get here, then you
>> will see a Oscar for the first and a Zero for the second  call received on the
>> fourth line ...
>
>
> You might be able to find a font that has a slash through the zero.
>
> Try the Bitstream Vera Sans Mono, or the Onuava font (http://new.myfonts.com/fonts/scriptorium/onuava/) for example.  Some fonts identify zeros with a dot in the center, but even they too might be hard to read in the heat of a contest.  The Ornuva's zero's appendage is somewhere between a slash and a dot :-)
>
> (http://www.urbanfonts.com/fonts/Onuava.htm)
>
> On the current Mac OS X, both the Monaco and the Osaka Regular-Mono that ships standard with the OS are mono-spaced fonts with a slashed zero.
>
> Many fonts do not have a slashed zero.  Because of that, cocoaModem provides an option to convert zeros upon reception to display the Unicode 216 (usually ASCII 175 decimal) on the screen.  Unicode calls this the "Latin Capital Letter O with Stroke" (see here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ø).
>
> The reason I had included that function is because my favorite font to use on digital modes is Adobe's Tekton Oblique, and that font does not have a slashed zero.  However, its Scandinavian slashed O looks very nice. (http://www.fonts.com/findfonts/detail.htm?productid=49185)
>
> For that matter, Ornuva font also has a nice Scandinavian slashed-O.
>
> You might check if your software can do this character substitution for you.  If not, it is a function that should be trivial for the developer to add.
>
> Just be sure that when you click on the word on the screen, the program will also convert it back to a true zero before transmitting :-).
>
> 73
> Chen, W7AY
>
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