kandi X-RAY | Powerline-font Summary
kandi X-RAY | Powerline-font Summary
Powerline-font
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Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA
- Patch the source font .
- Initialize font .
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Trending Discussions on Powerline-font
QUESTION
Edit: I ended up abandoning the default WSL Ubuntu console and moving to Windows Terminal by following the instructions here, and now everything is working.
I installed Oh-my-zsh on WSL 2 (Ubuntu 20.04 if it matters), and I get question marks instead of whatever should be in the prompt. It looks like this (theme is set to "agnoster"): Question marks
I looked it up and the most prevalent advice was to install powerline fonts, so I followed the instructions here: How to install Powerline fonts on WSL?. I indeed was able to set the font to a powerline font in the settings of the console, but the problem wasn't solved (I tried to restart my computer and it still didn't work).
I saw similar questions about iTerm but I couldn't extract from there relevant steps that I can take.
Any advice?
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-Sep-05 at 09:20Does this help? This is a tutorial by Microsoft on how to install power line fonts on the Command Prompt.
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/terminal/tutorials/powerline-setup
QUESTION
I've been using airline in Vim for quite some time now, with a variety of different fonts. However, I recently switched to a new machine, and I can't seem to get my powerline glyphs to work with any font except for an explicitly patched Monaco (from the monaco-powerline-font-git
AUR package). I have tried a couple of other fonts, such as Hack and Iosevka, which ostensibly have Powerline glyphs built in and, as far as I can tell, work out-of-the-box for others.
For comparison, here's what it looks like with the patched Monaco:
As you can see, all glyphs are displaying normally.
Here's what it looks like with Hack and Iosevka:
The Powerline glyphs seem to have been replaced by a bunch of ugly placeholders.
I don't mind Monaco too much, but I would prefer having some flexibility in choosing a modern font with built-in Powerline support.
Does anyone have an idea what I need to do to fix this?
Here are some system details, although I don't know which of these are actually relevant:
OS: Arch Linux
Editor: Neovim
Terminal Emulator: Termite (but the issue is identical in gnome-terminal as well as GVim)
ANSWER
Answered 2020-Mar-27 at 03:54I figured it out. For some reason, I had the following in my .vimrc
:
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Install Powerline-font
You can use Powerline-font like any standard Python library. You will need to make sure that you have a development environment consisting of a Python distribution including header files, a compiler, pip, and git installed. Make sure that your pip, setuptools, and wheel are up to date. When using pip it is generally recommended to install packages in a virtual environment to avoid changes to the system.
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