Fontsource Roboto Mono
The CSS and web font files to easily self-host the “Roboto Mono” font. Please visit the main Fontsource monorepo to view more details on this package.
Installation
Fontsource assumes you are using a bundler, such as Webpack, to load in CSS. Solutions like CRA, Gatsby and Next.js are prebuilt examples that are compatible.
yarn add @fontsource/roboto-mono
Then within your app entry file or site component, import it in. For example in Gatsby, you could choose to import it into a layout template (layout.js
), page component (index.js
), or gatsby-browser.js
.
import "@fontsource/roboto-mono"
Fontsource allows you to select weights and even individual styles, allowing you to cut down on payload sizes to the last byte! Utilizing the CSS unicode-range selector, all language subsets are accounted for.
import "@fontsource/roboto-mono/500.css"
import "@fontsource/roboto-mono/900-italic.css"
Alternatively, the same solutions could be imported via SCSS!
@import "~@fontsource/roboto-mono/index.css";
@import "~@fontsource/roboto-mono/300-italic.css";
These examples may not reflect actual compatibility. Please refer below.
Supported variables:
- Weights:
[100,200,300,400,500,600,700]
- Styles:
[italic,normal]
Finally, you can reference the font name in a CSS stylesheet, CSS Module, or CSS-in-JS.
body {
font-family: "Roboto Mono";
}
Variable Fonts
This particular typeface supports variable fonts.
Begin by importing both the variable and fallback font for non-compatible browsers.
import "@fontsource/roboto-mono/400.css"
Select either a stripped down weights only variant of the font or a full feature variant that contains all the variable axes.
import "@fontsource/roboto-mono/variable.css"
import "@fontsource/roboto-mono/variable-italic.css"
import "@fontsource/roboto-mono/variable-full.css"
import "@fontsource/roboto-mono/variable-full-italic.css"
Note a full
or italic
variant may NOT exist if there are no additional axes other than wght and/or ital. You can check the available axes here.
Followed by the CSS using the @supports tag, which checks whether the browser is capable of utilising variable fonts. Fallback fonts and their relevant CSS should be used outside the block, whilst all variable options should be used within the @supports block and utilising the font-variation-settings tag.
h1 {
font-family: Roboto Mono;
font-weight: 400;
}
@supports (font-variation-settings: normal) {
h1 {
font-family: Roboto MonoVariable;
font-variation-settings: "wght" 400;
}
}
To view the available variable axes that may be included in the font, click here. The meanings of all axes and the restrictions associated with them are explained there.
Additional Options
In the rare case you need to individually select a language subset and not utilize the CSS unicode-range selector, you may specify the import as follows. This is especially not recommended for languages, such as Japanese, with a large amount of characters.
import "@fontsource/roboto-mono/latin-ext.css"
import "@fontsource/roboto-mono/cyrillic-ext-500.css"
import "@fontsource/roboto-mono/greek-900-italic.css"
- Supported subsets:
[cyrillic,cyrillic-ext,greek,latin,latin-ext,vietnamese]
Licensing
It is important to always read the license for every font that you use.
Most of the fonts in the collection use the SIL Open Font License, v1.1. Some fonts use the Apache 2 license. The Ubuntu fonts use the Ubuntu Font License v1.0.
Google Fonts License Attributions
Other Notes
Font version (provided by source): v12
.
Feel free to star and contribute new ideas to this repository that aim to improve the performance of font loading, as well as expanding the existing library we already have. Any suggestions or ideas can be voiced via an issue.