How to use the Adobe Source Code Pro font?

Adobe released an open source font family called "Source Code Pro" (download here, Slashdot article here). How do I install it?

1

8 Answers

  1. Download the archive from the Source Code Pro homepage. You can do it also using wget: Open a terminal (ctrl-alt-t or press the win key and type "terminal") and type

    wget 
  2. Unzip the archive (you can use Nautilus for that, or use the following command).

    unzip 1.050R-it.zip
  3. Locate and ensure your fonts folder exist in your home directory, often in ~/.local/share/fonts folder (either go to home in Nautilus and create a new folder, or type the following from the terminal)

    fontpath="${XDG_DATA_HOME:-$HOME/.local/share}"/fonts
    mkdir -p $fontpath

If you already have that directory, don't worry.

  1. Move the Open Type fonts (*.otf) to the newly created .fonts directory. In command line, that would be

    cp source-code-pro-*-it/OTF/*.otf $fontpath
  2. If you haven't done it yet, open a terminal, and type

    fc-cache -f -v

Your font is now ready to use and the applications should be able to see it.

All in one script for those who simply want to copy/paste the answer

#!/bin/bash
set -euo pipefail
I1FS=$'\n\t'
mkdir -p /tmp/adodefont
cd /tmp/adodefont
wget -q --show-progress -O source-code-pro.zip
unzip -q source-code-pro.zip -d source-code-pro
fontpath="${XDG_DATA_HOME:-$HOME/.local/share}"/fonts
mkdir -p $fontpath
cp -v source-code-pro/*/OTF/*.otf $fontpath
fc-cache -f
rm -rf source-code-pro{,.zip}

If you want to install system wide instead of per user, copy the files to /usr/local/share/fonts/ instead of ~/.local/share/fonts/.

2

In order to install Source Code Pro, you can:

  1. Go to Google Fonts
  2. Type source code in the search box (the only match should be Source Code Pro)
  3. Click "Add to collection"
  4. Click on the text sample (this should present all the font styles)
  5. Tick all the check boxes
  6. Click the download icon (a down arrow on the top right) and download as Zip file

Now you just need to decompress the Zip file into your ~/.fonts folder:

mkdir -p ~/.fonts/Source_Code_Pro
unzip Source_Code_Pro.zip -d ~/.fonts/Source_Code_Pro

You may need to run

fc-cache -f

to make the fonts available (no need to log out).

3

Thanks for the answer, just a modified script to get the latest file

#!/bin/bash
FONT_NAME="SourceCodePro"
URL=""
mkdir /tmp/adodefont
cd /tmp/adodefont
wget ${URL} -O ${FONT_NAME}.zip
unzip -o -j ${FONT_NAME}.zip
mkdir -p ~/.fonts
cp *.otf ~/.fonts
fc-cache -f -v
0

My answer is similar to the others just updating the URL'S as it seems those are removed. Source code pro's new home seems to be on github. Source code pro on github.

#!/bin/bash
mkdir /tmp/adodefont
cd /tmp/adodefont
wget
unzip 1.017R.zip
mkdir -p ~/.fonts
cp source-code-pro-1.017R/OTF/*.otf ~/.fonts/
fc-cache -f -v
0
sudo wget --content-disposition -P /usr/share/fonts/opentype/source-code-pro 

That will install the latest release of the font (as I'm writing this in June 2021, released January 2021).

3

Based on a GitHub post, this script worked for me. I had to modify the folder names to get it to work.

version=1.050
echo "\n* Downloading version $version of source code pro font"
rm -f SourceCodePro_FontsOnly-$version.zip
rm -rf SourceCodePro_FontsOnly-$version
font_folder=source-code-pro-2.030R-ro-${version}R-it
zip_file=${version}R-it.zip
wget
echo "\n* Unziping package"
unzip $zip_file
mkdir -p ~/.fonts
echo "\n* Copying fonts to ~/fonts"
cp $font_folder/OTF/*.otf ~/.fonts/
echo "\n* Updating font cache"
sudo fc-cache -f -v
echo "\n* Looking for 'Source Code Pro' in installed fonts"
fc-list | grep "Source Code Pro"
echo "\n* Now, you can use the 'Source Code Pro' fonts, ** for sublime text ** just add the lines bellow to 'Preferences > Settings':"
echo '\n "font_face": "Source Code Pro",'
echo ' "font_size": 10'
echo "\n* Finished :)\n"

There is also a working third-party debian package on github.

To install:

git clone
cd source-code-pro-deb
sudo apt-get install debhelper
dpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot -b -uc -us
sudo dpkg -i ../fonts-source-code-pro_1.017_all.deb

Not exactly what the OP is asking for, but this might be easier.

You can install the powerline fonts which include slightly modified versions of a bunch of mono fonts which work with powerline for the prompt and Vim with the vim-airline plugin. It kind of gives you an 'awesome' list of source code mono fonts to try out, including "Source Code Pro". To install all the fonts:

$ git clone --depth=1
$ cd fonts
$ ./install.sh
2

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