Manito Manopla
This font was made with glyphr. In a conventional program (Let’s say that this program is made in C), for it to be considered open source, the c file that contains the code has to be distributed, outside of that, there is the compilation file and additionally a README, in fonts it is different, the majority use a different programming language from one to the other to create the typography, and the only way I see that a font made in fontforge can be considered open source is for it to be shared the sfd file that fontforge generates when saving the font, this file is editable in a code editor, not like other files such as otf or ttf, which are directly binary
I recommend using qt for the interface, for audio use jack, it is better for music production, if you want to load vst plugins into the program, you can use yabridge
Ok, thanks for the clarification, I needed it, now with everything clarified, I can make a description of the directory. There are 3 types of folders, images to show the fonts in images, fonts for the ttf and otf binaries and finally sources for the sfd files, which would be the source code of the fonts, outside those 3 folders, there would be Makefile, README and the license. Thanks for the help, now you can make the directory in an organized way
Because it’s fun
I had mentioned 12 monkeys and primer because it has a similar style to memento despite having different environment, one that I forgot to mention was donnie darko, these movies have an unconventional narrative and endings, these characters are in a much bigger situation than they can measure, but for those who were not involved that never happened, since they never saw what happened from start to finish, when one of these movies ends, you know that it was not a happy, sad or neutral ending, which what happened there was something else
How is this different from DXVK?