Aligning individual characters/glyphs like a monospace font












3















You know how most fonts and typography in general have characters/glyphs of various widths? Like if you compare a regular font:




A E I O U

Z X C V B

a e i o u

z x c v b




They don't quite line up perfectly like a fixed width or monospace font does:



A E I O U  
Z X C V B
a e i o u
z x c v b


I've just discovered how it's possible to align parts of a LaTeX document (still getting the hang of it) and I was curious to find out if it's possible to align and center every individual character of an ordinary font, so as to emulate fixed width characters of monospaced fonts.



If you look closely the actual characters are not all necessarily the same width, but the characters and the empty space around them amount to the same dimensions, which is what makes me think it might be possible:
A E I O U
a e i o u
Z X C V B
z x c v b



Some more obvious comparisons:
1 I ! | .
0 W ?



Anyway, it could be quite useful to me, if it's possible. Might end up just being to ugly for this life, but I'd like to give it a shot if anyone can think of a way to do it.










share|improve this question

























  • Have you seen tex.stackexchange.com/q/182972 ?

    – Thérèse
    Mar 24 at 23:30











  • @Thérèse I have now, thanks.

    – tjt263
    Mar 24 at 23:46


















3















You know how most fonts and typography in general have characters/glyphs of various widths? Like if you compare a regular font:




A E I O U

Z X C V B

a e i o u

z x c v b




They don't quite line up perfectly like a fixed width or monospace font does:



A E I O U  
Z X C V B
a e i o u
z x c v b


I've just discovered how it's possible to align parts of a LaTeX document (still getting the hang of it) and I was curious to find out if it's possible to align and center every individual character of an ordinary font, so as to emulate fixed width characters of monospaced fonts.



If you look closely the actual characters are not all necessarily the same width, but the characters and the empty space around them amount to the same dimensions, which is what makes me think it might be possible:
A E I O U
a e i o u
Z X C V B
z x c v b



Some more obvious comparisons:
1 I ! | .
0 W ?



Anyway, it could be quite useful to me, if it's possible. Might end up just being to ugly for this life, but I'd like to give it a shot if anyone can think of a way to do it.










share|improve this question

























  • Have you seen tex.stackexchange.com/q/182972 ?

    – Thérèse
    Mar 24 at 23:30











  • @Thérèse I have now, thanks.

    – tjt263
    Mar 24 at 23:46
















3












3








3








You know how most fonts and typography in general have characters/glyphs of various widths? Like if you compare a regular font:




A E I O U

Z X C V B

a e i o u

z x c v b




They don't quite line up perfectly like a fixed width or monospace font does:



A E I O U  
Z X C V B
a e i o u
z x c v b


I've just discovered how it's possible to align parts of a LaTeX document (still getting the hang of it) and I was curious to find out if it's possible to align and center every individual character of an ordinary font, so as to emulate fixed width characters of monospaced fonts.



If you look closely the actual characters are not all necessarily the same width, but the characters and the empty space around them amount to the same dimensions, which is what makes me think it might be possible:
A E I O U
a e i o u
Z X C V B
z x c v b



Some more obvious comparisons:
1 I ! | .
0 W ?



Anyway, it could be quite useful to me, if it's possible. Might end up just being to ugly for this life, but I'd like to give it a shot if anyone can think of a way to do it.










share|improve this question
















You know how most fonts and typography in general have characters/glyphs of various widths? Like if you compare a regular font:




A E I O U

Z X C V B

a e i o u

z x c v b




They don't quite line up perfectly like a fixed width or monospace font does:



A E I O U  
Z X C V B
a e i o u
z x c v b


I've just discovered how it's possible to align parts of a LaTeX document (still getting the hang of it) and I was curious to find out if it's possible to align and center every individual character of an ordinary font, so as to emulate fixed width characters of monospaced fonts.



If you look closely the actual characters are not all necessarily the same width, but the characters and the empty space around them amount to the same dimensions, which is what makes me think it might be possible:
A E I O U
a e i o u
Z X C V B
z x c v b



Some more obvious comparisons:
1 I ! | .
0 W ?



Anyway, it could be quite useful to me, if it's possible. Might end up just being to ugly for this life, but I'd like to give it a shot if anyone can think of a way to do it.







fonts horizontal-alignment vertical-alignment






share|improve this question















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share|improve this question








edited Mar 25 at 1:44









siracusa

5,16511429




5,16511429










asked Mar 24 at 23:07









tjt263tjt263

2077




2077













  • Have you seen tex.stackexchange.com/q/182972 ?

    – Thérèse
    Mar 24 at 23:30











  • @Thérèse I have now, thanks.

    – tjt263
    Mar 24 at 23:46





















  • Have you seen tex.stackexchange.com/q/182972 ?

    – Thérèse
    Mar 24 at 23:30











  • @Thérèse I have now, thanks.

    – tjt263
    Mar 24 at 23:46



















Have you seen tex.stackexchange.com/q/182972 ?

– Thérèse
Mar 24 at 23:30





Have you seen tex.stackexchange.com/q/182972 ?

– Thérèse
Mar 24 at 23:30













@Thérèse I have now, thanks.

– tjt263
Mar 24 at 23:46







@Thérèse I have now, thanks.

– tjt263
Mar 24 at 23:46












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















3














I use a tabbed stack, with an input space as the tab character (it does not show in the output). I also force all columns to be equal width, which will take on the widest character in the matrix.



documentclass{article}
usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
usepackage{tabstackengine}
begin{document}
setstackTAB{ }
fixTABwidth{T}
tabbedCenterstack{
A E I O U\
a e i o u\
Z X C V B\
z x c v b\
1 I ! | .\
0 W ? — …
}
end{document}


enter image description here



I can employ a negative tab gap, setstacktabbedgap{-4pt}, to squeeze the columns together, but then the em-dash and ellipsis overlap:



enter image description here






share|improve this answer

































    2














    A simple solution is to use the listingspackage with fixed width columns:



    documentclass{article}

    usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
    usepackage{listings}

    lstset{
    columns=fixed,
    literate={—}{{---}}1 {…}{{...}}1
    }

    begin{document}
    begin{lstlisting}
    A E I O U
    a e i o u
    Z X C V B
    z x c v b

    1 I ! | .
    0 W ? — …
    end{lstlisting}
    end{document}


    enter image description here



    Note that listings doesn't work well with Unicode characters (TeX.SX has several questions on that matter), so I used the literate option as a quick fix here.






    share|improve this answer
























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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      3














      I use a tabbed stack, with an input space as the tab character (it does not show in the output). I also force all columns to be equal width, which will take on the widest character in the matrix.



      documentclass{article}
      usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
      usepackage{tabstackengine}
      begin{document}
      setstackTAB{ }
      fixTABwidth{T}
      tabbedCenterstack{
      A E I O U\
      a e i o u\
      Z X C V B\
      z x c v b\
      1 I ! | .\
      0 W ? — …
      }
      end{document}


      enter image description here



      I can employ a negative tab gap, setstacktabbedgap{-4pt}, to squeeze the columns together, but then the em-dash and ellipsis overlap:



      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer






























        3














        I use a tabbed stack, with an input space as the tab character (it does not show in the output). I also force all columns to be equal width, which will take on the widest character in the matrix.



        documentclass{article}
        usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
        usepackage{tabstackengine}
        begin{document}
        setstackTAB{ }
        fixTABwidth{T}
        tabbedCenterstack{
        A E I O U\
        a e i o u\
        Z X C V B\
        z x c v b\
        1 I ! | .\
        0 W ? — …
        }
        end{document}


        enter image description here



        I can employ a negative tab gap, setstacktabbedgap{-4pt}, to squeeze the columns together, but then the em-dash and ellipsis overlap:



        enter image description here






        share|improve this answer




























          3












          3








          3







          I use a tabbed stack, with an input space as the tab character (it does not show in the output). I also force all columns to be equal width, which will take on the widest character in the matrix.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
          usepackage{tabstackengine}
          begin{document}
          setstackTAB{ }
          fixTABwidth{T}
          tabbedCenterstack{
          A E I O U\
          a e i o u\
          Z X C V B\
          z x c v b\
          1 I ! | .\
          0 W ? — …
          }
          end{document}


          enter image description here



          I can employ a negative tab gap, setstacktabbedgap{-4pt}, to squeeze the columns together, but then the em-dash and ellipsis overlap:



          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer















          I use a tabbed stack, with an input space as the tab character (it does not show in the output). I also force all columns to be equal width, which will take on the widest character in the matrix.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
          usepackage{tabstackengine}
          begin{document}
          setstackTAB{ }
          fixTABwidth{T}
          tabbedCenterstack{
          A E I O U\
          a e i o u\
          Z X C V B\
          z x c v b\
          1 I ! | .\
          0 W ? — …
          }
          end{document}


          enter image description here



          I can employ a negative tab gap, setstacktabbedgap{-4pt}, to squeeze the columns together, but then the em-dash and ellipsis overlap:



          enter image description here







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Mar 25 at 1:57

























          answered Mar 25 at 1:52









          Steven B. SegletesSteven B. Segletes

          160k9204413




          160k9204413























              2














              A simple solution is to use the listingspackage with fixed width columns:



              documentclass{article}

              usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
              usepackage{listings}

              lstset{
              columns=fixed,
              literate={—}{{---}}1 {…}{{...}}1
              }

              begin{document}
              begin{lstlisting}
              A E I O U
              a e i o u
              Z X C V B
              z x c v b

              1 I ! | .
              0 W ? — …
              end{lstlisting}
              end{document}


              enter image description here



              Note that listings doesn't work well with Unicode characters (TeX.SX has several questions on that matter), so I used the literate option as a quick fix here.






              share|improve this answer




























                2














                A simple solution is to use the listingspackage with fixed width columns:



                documentclass{article}

                usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
                usepackage{listings}

                lstset{
                columns=fixed,
                literate={—}{{---}}1 {…}{{...}}1
                }

                begin{document}
                begin{lstlisting}
                A E I O U
                a e i o u
                Z X C V B
                z x c v b

                1 I ! | .
                0 W ? — …
                end{lstlisting}
                end{document}


                enter image description here



                Note that listings doesn't work well with Unicode characters (TeX.SX has several questions on that matter), so I used the literate option as a quick fix here.






                share|improve this answer


























                  2












                  2








                  2







                  A simple solution is to use the listingspackage with fixed width columns:



                  documentclass{article}

                  usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
                  usepackage{listings}

                  lstset{
                  columns=fixed,
                  literate={—}{{---}}1 {…}{{...}}1
                  }

                  begin{document}
                  begin{lstlisting}
                  A E I O U
                  a e i o u
                  Z X C V B
                  z x c v b

                  1 I ! | .
                  0 W ? — …
                  end{lstlisting}
                  end{document}


                  enter image description here



                  Note that listings doesn't work well with Unicode characters (TeX.SX has several questions on that matter), so I used the literate option as a quick fix here.






                  share|improve this answer













                  A simple solution is to use the listingspackage with fixed width columns:



                  documentclass{article}

                  usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
                  usepackage{listings}

                  lstset{
                  columns=fixed,
                  literate={—}{{---}}1 {…}{{...}}1
                  }

                  begin{document}
                  begin{lstlisting}
                  A E I O U
                  a e i o u
                  Z X C V B
                  z x c v b

                  1 I ! | .
                  0 W ? — …
                  end{lstlisting}
                  end{document}


                  enter image description here



                  Note that listings doesn't work well with Unicode characters (TeX.SX has several questions on that matter), so I used the literate option as a quick fix here.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Mar 25 at 1:42









                  siracusasiracusa

                  5,16511429




                  5,16511429






























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