Result for 2C09C07C64DB543A27B89D44ECEC45ADEC4B187C

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/fonts/truetype/andikanewbasic/AndikaNewBasic-BI.ttf
FileSize272648
MD50B086F6193FDB7E617049AED2A5595B6
SHA-12C09C07C64DB543A27B89D44ECEC45ADEC4B187C
SHA-256E6533D2D15AFD652EC5D107BFD0DB5A177DD8762808D40557EB0544A267D2120
SSDEEP6144:LYLVG9eG+Re4SdjFNjF/QBxGnxMQ83um7Y0N0p83:LYLov4SuxGnxI3uH60m3
TLSHT1AE444D329BA2994AFF626978C8F043717331BCE9AB72E35B38545115C80B1F09FE2765
hashlookup:parent-total13
hashlookup:trust100

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 13)

The searched file hash is included in 13 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize1032696
MD5E3051F14472D74CF8E6AFEA3142C4F25
PackageDescriptionsmart Unicode Latin font family for literacy (more faces, limited charset) Andika ("Write!" in Swahili) is a sans serif, Unicode-compliant font designed especially for literacy use, taking into account the needs of beginning readers. The focus is on clear, easy-to-perceive letterforms that will not be easily confused with one another. . A sans serif font is preferred by some literacy personnel for teaching people to read. Its forms are simpler and less cluttered than some serif fonts can be. For years, literacy workers have had to make do with fonts that were available but not really suitable for beginning readers and writers. In some cases, literacy specialists have had to tediously cobble together letters from a variety of fonts in order to get the all of characters they need for their particular language project, resulting in confusing and unattractive publications. Andika addresses those issues. . Andika New Basic is a limited-character-set (no extended IPA or Cyrillic) version of Andika that includes regular, bold, italic and bold-italic faces. Andika New Basic gives a preview of what a whole range of new weights will eventually look like.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefonts-sil-andikanewbasic
PackageSectionfonts
PackageVersion5.500-1
SHA-11FDA43F9DE2E62EC3EA6B5561AD74354AF50E39B
SHA-2567500255959AB981A4FCBB06D5F2AE74C7ACB905DE74D78054155A7255E95A754
Key Value
FileSize1039428
MD5B70D591C2073B8C4F6408C2152EC2F78
PackageDescriptionsmart Unicode Latin font family for literacy (more faces, limited charset) Andika ("Write!" in Swahili) is a sans serif, Unicode-compliant font designed especially for literacy use, taking into account the needs of beginning readers. The focus is on clear, easy-to-perceive letterforms that will not be easily confused with one another. . A sans serif font is preferred by some literacy personnel for teaching people to read. Its forms are simpler and less cluttered than some serif fonts can be. For years, literacy workers have had to make do with fonts that were available but not really suitable for beginning readers and writers. In some cases, literacy specialists have had to tediously cobble together letters from a variety of fonts in order to get the all of characters they need for their particular language project, resulting in confusing and unattractive publications. Andika addresses those issues. . Andika New Basic is a limited-character-set (no extended IPA or Cyrillic) version of Andika that includes regular, bold, italic and bold-italic faces. Andika New Basic gives a preview of what a whole range of new weights will eventually look like. . A hallmark of Andika's versatility for global use is its selection of alternate letterforms. These alternates are accessible via OpenType and Graphite font features. For applications that do not support OpenType or Graphite, TypeTuner Web (http://scripts.sil.org/ttw/fonts2go.cgi) allows you to download a custom font with your choice of which forms should be the default. TypeTuner is also available as a standalone utility - (http://scripts.sil.org/TypeTuner). . Andika New Basic is a limited-character-set version of Andika that includes a full family of styles (Regular, Bold, Italic and Bold-Italic). . In particular, these fonts do not support: Full extended Latin IPA Complete support for Central European languages Greek Cyrillic . What is the difference between Andika and Andika New Basic? Andika has a more complete character set comparable to Charis SIL and Doulos SIL Andika New Basic has a limited character set, supporting only the Basic Latin and Latin-1 Supplement Unicode ranges, plus a selection of the more commonly used extended Latin characters, with miscellaneous diacritical marks, symbols and punctuation. Andika New Basic has all four faces: Regular, Bold, Italic and Bold-Italic . What is the difference between Andika Basic (2008) and Andika New Basic? Andika New Basic has all four faces: Regular, Bold, Italic and Bold-Italic Andika New Basic has a few more characters than Andika Basic Andika New Basic uses different glyphs for "a" and "r" based characters than Andika Basic, and are identical to the main Andika font Graphite feature identifiers were integers in Andika Basic and are 4-character alphanumeric tags in Andika New Basic . The full-character-set Andika is being updated to include all four faces (Regular, Bold, Italic and Bold-Italic). . Webfont versions and HTML/CSS examples are also available. . The full font sources are publicly available at https://github.com/silnrsi/font-andika An open workflow is used for building, testing and releasing.
PackageMaintainerDebian Fonts Task Force <debian-fonts@lists.debian.org>
PackageNamefonts-sil-andikanewbasic
PackageSectionfonts
PackageVersion5.500-3.1
SHA-179963E2F1236C45E3C3D15C169225FD9628BCC99
SHA-2565166DCF846F01CBDD054AA4C862E268918D9BDDEC6E47C2BBB8212E70253E1E6
Key Value
MD509616EE07D4962AD870FB7586750B6B0
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionAndika New Basic is a limited-character-set (no extended IPA or Cyrillic) version of Andika that includes regular, bold, italic and bold-italic faces. Andika is a sans serif, Unicode-compliant font family designed especially for literacy use, taking into account the needs of beginning readers. The focus is on clear, easy-to-perceive letter-forms that will not be readily confused with one another. A sans serif font is preferred by some literacy personnel for teaching people to read. Its forms are simpler and less cluttered than those of most serif fonts. For years, literacy workers have had to make do with fonts that were not really suitable for beginning readers and writers. In some cases, literacy specialists have had to tediously assemble letters from a variety of fonts in order to get all of the characters they need for their particular language project, resulting in confusing and unattractive publications. Andika addresses those issues.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamesil-andika-new-basic-fonts
PackageRelease4.fc33
PackageVersion5.500
SHA-1C3B49AEA6DAAC9B29E0143B8EC9DD39A719224EF
SHA-2561E1AD62DE589EE03B86AE03FC450A91E646D07836676DE6DA77A0CD65CF8CA70
Key Value
FileSize1039056
MD581464B09359D48AA945C0F030FB4A1BE
PackageDescriptionsmart Unicode Latin font family for literacy (more faces, limited charset) Andika ("Write!" in Swahili) is a sans serif, Unicode-compliant font designed especially for literacy use, taking into account the needs of beginning readers. The focus is on clear, easy-to-perceive letterforms that will not be easily confused with one another. . A sans serif font is preferred by some literacy personnel for teaching people to read. Its forms are simpler and less cluttered than some serif fonts can be. For years, literacy workers have had to make do with fonts that were available but not really suitable for beginning readers and writers. In some cases, literacy specialists have had to tediously cobble together letters from a variety of fonts in order to get the all of characters they need for their particular language project, resulting in confusing and unattractive publications. Andika addresses those issues. . Andika New Basic is a limited-character-set (no extended IPA or Cyrillic) version of Andika that includes regular, bold, italic and bold-italic faces. Andika New Basic gives a preview of what a whole range of new weights will eventually look like. . A hallmark of Andika's versatility for global use is its selection of alternate letterforms. These alternates are accessible via OpenType and Graphite font features. For applications that do not support OpenType or Graphite, TypeTuner Web (http://scripts.sil.org/ttw/fonts2go.cgi) allows you to download a custom font with your choice of which forms should be the default. TypeTuner is also available as a standalone utility - (http://scripts.sil.org/TypeTuner). . Andika New Basic is a limited-character-set version of Andika that includes a full family of styles (Regular, Bold, Italic and Bold-Italic). . In particular, these fonts do not support: Full extended Latin IPA Complete support for Central European languages Greek Cyrillic . What is the difference between Andika and Andika New Basic? Andika has a more complete character set comparable to Charis SIL and Doulos SIL Andika New Basic has a limited character set, supporting only the Basic Latin and Latin-1 Supplement Unicode ranges, plus a selection of the more commonly used extended Latin characters, with miscellaneous diacritical marks, symbols and punctuation. Andika New Basic has all four faces: Regular, Bold, Italic and Bold-Italic . What is the difference between Andika Basic (2008) and Andika New Basic? Andika New Basic has all four faces: Regular, Bold, Italic and Bold-Italic Andika New Basic has a few more characters than Andika Basic Andika New Basic uses different glyphs for "a" and "r" based characters than Andika Basic, and are identical to the main Andika font Graphite feature identifiers were integers in Andika Basic and are 4-character alphanumeric tags in Andika New Basic . The full-character-set Andika is being updated to include all four faces (Regular, Bold, Italic and Bold-Italic). . Webfont versions and HTML/CSS examples are also available. . The full font sources are publicly available at https://github.com/silnrsi/font-andika An open workflow is used for building, testing and releasing.
PackageMaintainerDebian Fonts Task Force <debian-fonts@lists.debian.org>
PackageNamefonts-sil-andikanewbasic
PackageSectionfonts
PackageVersion5.500-3
SHA-1EF9B7916CE26ABE6633894D850A00D92E75EAD6A
SHA-256D8CDF4F19EC22F85F09196EDC3BE159798374043B9E48605EB73F5C1F11A2BBD
Key Value
MD539FE49C554436AE18710AC76D0D07B58
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionAndika is a sans serif, Unicode-compliant font designed especially for literacy use, taking into account the needs of beginning readers. The focus is on clear, easy-to-perceive letterforms that will not be readily confused with one another. A sans serif font is preferred by some literacy personnel for teaching people to read. Its forms are simpler and less cluttered than those of most serif fonts.
PackageNamesil-andika-fonts
PackageRelease2.2
PackageVersion5.000
SHA-16D3896D8745EF1A16ADC7EAE07D838938CFB53F3
SHA-256CDBFE9BE42A58C4505197404FC2523BF7C807A9A2338440BE97D2683553FA70E
Key Value
FileSize1034124
MD51812E11AF734C74A7B2FEADD255EB879
PackageDescriptionsmart Unicode Latin font family for literacy (more faces, limited charset) Andika ("Write!" in Swahili) is a sans serif, Unicode-compliant font designed especially for literacy use, taking into account the needs of beginning readers. The focus is on clear, easy-to-perceive letterforms that will not be easily confused with one another. . A sans serif font is preferred by some literacy personnel for teaching people to read. Its forms are simpler and less cluttered than some serif fonts can be. For years, literacy workers have had to make do with fonts that were available but not really suitable for beginning readers and writers. In some cases, literacy specialists have had to tediously cobble together letters from a variety of fonts in order to get the all of characters they need for their particular language project, resulting in confusing and unattractive publications. Andika addresses those issues. . Andika New Basic is a limited-character-set (no extended IPA or Cyrillic) version of Andika that includes regular, bold, italic and bold-italic faces. Andika New Basic gives a preview of what a whole range of new weights will eventually look like. . A hallmark of Andika's versatility for global use is its selection of alternate letterforms. These alternates are accessible via OpenType and Graphite font features. For applications that do not support OpenType or Graphite, TypeTuner Web (http://scripts.sil.org/ttw/fonts2go.cgi) allows you to download a custom font with your choice of which forms should be the default. TypeTuner is also available as a standalone utility - (http://scripts.sil.org/TypeTuner). . Andika New Basic is a limited-character-set version of Andika that includes a full family of styles (Regular, Bold, Italic and Bold-Italic). . In particular, these fonts do not support: Full extended Latin IPA Complete support for Central European languages Greek Cyrillic . What is the difference between Andika and Andika New Basic? Andika has a more complete character set comparable to Charis SIL and Doulos SIL Andika New Basic has a limited character set, supporting only the Basic Latin and Latin-1 Supplement Unicode ranges, plus a selection of the more commonly used extended Latin characters, with miscellaneous diacritical marks, symbols and punctuation. Andika New Basic has all four faces: Regular, Bold, Italic and Bold-Italic . What is the difference between Andika Basic (2008) and Andika New Basic? Andika New Basic has all four faces: Regular, Bold, Italic and Bold-Italic Andika New Basic has a few more characters than Andika Basic Andika New Basic uses different glyphs for "a" and "r" based characters than Andika Basic, and are identical to the main Andika font Graphite feature identifiers were integers in Andika Basic and are 4-character alphanumeric tags in Andika New Basic . The full-character-set Andika is being updated to include all four faces (Regular, Bold, Italic and Bold-Italic). . Webfont versions and HTML/CSS examples are also available. . The full font sources are publicly available at https://github.com/silnrsi/font-andika An open workflow is used for building, testing and releasing.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefonts-sil-andikanewbasic
PackageSectionfonts
PackageVersion5.500-3
SHA-125216F351885E10452DE137346E39B5AC6E563BC
SHA-2561329B25F11778D7414FB771D71A4833C71AAE2159E9C7E79329957283FD02C75
Key Value
MD51709C1937385A9CB775790AEBC7EA16D
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionAndika is a sans serif, Unicode-compliant font designed especially for literacy use, taking into account the needs of beginning readers. The focus is on clear, easy-to-perceive letterforms that will not be readily confused with one another. A sans serif font is preferred by some literacy personnel for teaching people to read. Its forms are simpler and less cluttered than those of most serif fonts.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamesil-andika-fonts
PackageReleaselp152.2.2
PackageVersion5.000
SHA-1F83D7ACE0A29F440A21DF69BE1E9A8FAC5AA5B2A
SHA-25663F0D6C04B37082405C1DA31617D7BFDA085D956B856CF3B7157C357222ECA39
Key Value
MD5FD37759DD505F148C8D19BE9F6F06FDC
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionAndika is a sans serif, Unicode-compliant font designed especially for literacy use, taking into account the needs of beginning readers. The focus is on clear, easy-to-perceive letterforms that will not be readily confused with one another. A sans serif font is preferred by some literacy personnel for teaching people to read. Its forms are simpler and less cluttered than those of most serif fonts.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamesil-andika-fonts
PackageReleaselp151.1.1
PackageVersion5.000
SHA-159DA5A6F12D49CF926B97954CF74EC22AD7F4052
SHA-2566A655C200A2E67E49651BA48D79487525967A98B6ED4FC7B3E0406D4D1AAE1FD
Key Value
FileSize1034148
MD52032FE42560AE5404A278A1969721364
PackageDescriptionsmart Unicode Latin font family for literacy (more faces, limited charset) Andika ("Write!" in Swahili) is a sans serif, Unicode-compliant font designed especially for literacy use, taking into account the needs of beginning readers. The focus is on clear, easy-to-perceive letterforms that will not be easily confused with one another. . A sans serif font is preferred by some literacy personnel for teaching people to read. Its forms are simpler and less cluttered than some serif fonts can be. For years, literacy workers have had to make do with fonts that were available but not really suitable for beginning readers and writers. In some cases, literacy specialists have had to tediously cobble together letters from a variety of fonts in order to get the all of characters they need for their particular language project, resulting in confusing and unattractive publications. Andika addresses those issues. . Andika New Basic is a limited-character-set (no extended IPA or Cyrillic) version of Andika that includes regular, bold, italic and bold-italic faces. Andika New Basic gives a preview of what a whole range of new weights will eventually look like. . A hallmark of Andika's versatility for global use is its selection of alternate letterforms. These alternates are accessible via OpenType and Graphite font features. For applications that do not support OpenType or Graphite, TypeTuner Web (http://scripts.sil.org/ttw/fonts2go.cgi) allows you to download a custom font with your choice of which forms should be the default. TypeTuner is also available as a standalone utility - (http://scripts.sil.org/TypeTuner). . Andika New Basic is a limited-character-set version of Andika that includes a full family of styles (Regular, Bold, Italic and Bold-Italic). . In particular, these fonts do not support: Full extended Latin IPA Complete support for Central European languages Greek Cyrillic . What is the difference between Andika and Andika New Basic? Andika has a more complete character set comparable to Charis SIL and Doulos SIL Andika New Basic has a limited character set, supporting only the Basic Latin and Latin-1 Supplement Unicode ranges, plus a selection of the more commonly used extended Latin characters, with miscellaneous diacritical marks, symbols and punctuation. Andika New Basic has all four faces: Regular, Bold, Italic and Bold-Italic . What is the difference between Andika Basic (2008) and Andika New Basic? Andika New Basic has all four faces: Regular, Bold, Italic and Bold-Italic Andika New Basic has a few more characters than Andika Basic Andika New Basic uses different glyphs for "a" and "r" based characters than Andika Basic, and are identical to the main Andika font Graphite feature identifiers were integers in Andika Basic and are 4-character alphanumeric tags in Andika New Basic . The full-character-set Andika is being updated to include all four faces (Regular, Bold, Italic and Bold-Italic). . Webfont versions and HTML/CSS examples are also available. . The full font sources are publicly available at https://github.com/silnrsi/font-andika An open workflow is used for building, testing and releasing.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefonts-sil-andikanewbasic
PackageSectionfonts
PackageVersion5.500-3.1
SHA-1E814A0B7D17004F3C980689C306AD7DDA30C3062
SHA-256C8596F47194B1F86DCC87CC28743CCE88319C70BC292833E13858014087013B1
Key Value
MD5111F58E1D67DCA97328024E1B3714ECA
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionAndika New Basic is a limited-character-set (no extended IPA or Cyrillic) version of Andika that includes regular, bold, italic and bold-italic faces. Andika is a sans serif, Unicode-compliant font family designed especially for literacy use, taking into account the needs of beginning readers. The focus is on clear, easy-to-perceive letter-forms that will not be readily confused with one another. A sans serif font is preferred by some literacy personnel for teaching people to read. Its forms are simpler and less cluttered than those of most serif fonts. For years, literacy workers have had to make do with fonts that were not really suitable for beginning readers and writers. In some cases, literacy specialists have had to tediously assemble letters from a variety of fonts in order to get all of the characters they need for their particular language project, resulting in confusing and unattractive publications. Andika addresses those issues.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamesil-andika-new-basic-fonts
PackageRelease4.fc33
PackageVersion5.500
SHA-12469F87D107A97D637E41CD8EA220A1C7FF1BDB5
SHA-2569FBEFF82C6AE2C1B7ABDF80F224162A3BD10CEA0419FCCD97C31D10D33AF18A8
Key Value
MD57FF0449BEEAB504AF4B91766FC66C4BB
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionAndika New Basic is a limited-character-set (no extended IPA or Cyrillic) version of Andika that includes regular, bold, italic and bold-italic faces. Andika is a sans serif, Unicode-compliant font family designed especially for literacy use, taking into account the needs of beginning readers. The focus is on clear, easy-to-perceive letter-forms that will not be readily confused with one another. A sans serif font is preferred by some literacy personnel for teaching people to read. Its forms are simpler and less cluttered than those of most serif fonts. For years, literacy workers have had to make do with fonts that were not really suitable for beginning readers and writers. In some cases, literacy specialists have had to tediously assemble letters from a variety of fonts in order to get all of the characters they need for their particular language project, resulting in confusing and unattractive publications. Andika addresses those issues.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamesil-andika-new-basic-fonts
PackageRelease2.fc32
PackageVersion5.500
SHA-11FBBC5031283A7603BBB475393026778548FE7F0
SHA-256775CBC42B4CF6721BA5160BF3A47487975D3D22E56203B1A22BF9974014BE03D
Key Value
MD55B882EF931BB61C5195207A0E0F4C521
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionAndika is a sans serif, Unicode-compliant font designed especially for literacy use, taking into account the needs of beginning readers. The focus is on clear, easy-to-perceive letterforms that will not be readily confused with one another. A sans serif font is preferred by some literacy personnel for teaching people to read. Its forms are simpler and less cluttered than those of most serif fonts.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamesil-andika-fonts
PackageReleasebp153.1.12
PackageVersion5.000
SHA-1178F21F7E08B41095312EFB991CC1928437B52FA
SHA-256048AD657E954D73DF60FE38CFF10DF26ABD4B17400CFA904CF81686353021A72
Key Value
FileSize1036652
MD5A03582DCE3B7F96D7E5D80FBD12A9244
PackageDescriptionsmart Unicode Latin font family for literacy (more faces, limited charset) Andika ("Write!" in Swahili) is a sans serif, Unicode-compliant font designed especially for literacy use, taking into account the needs of beginning readers. The focus is on clear, easy-to-perceive letterforms that will not be easily confused with one another. . A sans serif font is preferred by some literacy personnel for teaching people to read. Its forms are simpler and less cluttered than some serif fonts can be. For years, literacy workers have had to make do with fonts that were available but not really suitable for beginning readers and writers. In some cases, literacy specialists have had to tediously cobble together letters from a variety of fonts in order to get the all of characters they need for their particular language project, resulting in confusing and unattractive publications. Andika addresses those issues. . Andika New Basic is a limited-character-set (no extended IPA or Cyrillic) version of Andika that includes regular, bold, italic and bold-italic faces. Andika New Basic gives a preview of what a whole range of new weights will eventually look like.
PackageMaintainerDebian Fonts Task Force <pkg-fonts-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamefonts-sil-andikanewbasic
PackageSectionfonts
PackageVersion5.500-1
SHA-1BA10A9FD56BF92C647E081B5B2365579F278B596
SHA-2568A64098059338115D0B772B0F1E0FAD02C90AA38D29D924C18DE9E2B428ACA61