Add support for programming ligatures to xterm.js when running in environments with access to Node.js APIs (such as Electron).
- Node.js 8.x or higher (present in Electron 1.8.3 or higher)
- xterm.js 4.0.0 or higher using the default canvas renderer
npm install --save @xterm/addon-ligatures
import { Terminal } from '@xterm/xterm';
import { LigaturesAddon } from '@xterm/addon-ligatures';
const terminal = new Terminal();
const ligaturesAddon = new LigaturesAddon();
terminal.open(containerElement);
terminal.loadAddon(ligaturesAddon);
In a browser environment, font ligature information is read directly by the web browser and used to render text correctly without any intervention from the developer. As of version 3, xterm.js uses the canvas to render characters individually, resulting in a significant performance boost. However, this means that it can no longer lean on the browser to determine when to draw font ligatures.
This package locates the font file on disk for the font currently in use by the terminal and parses the ligature information out of it (via the font-ligatures package). As text is rendered in xterm.js, this package annotates it with the locations of ligatures, allowing xterm.js to render it correctly.
Since this package depends on being able to find and resolve a system font from disk, it has to have system access that isn't available in the web browser. As a result, this package is mainly useful in environments that combine browser and Node.js runtimes (such as Electron).
When ligatures cannot be fetched from the environment, a set of "fallback" ligatures is used to get the most common ligatures working. These fallback ligatures can be customized with options passed to LigatureAddon.constructor
.
This package makes use of the following fonts for testing:
- Fira Code - Licensed under the OFL by Nikita Prokopov, Mozilla Foundation with reserved names Fira Code, Fira Mono, and Fira Sans
- Iosevka - Licensed under the OFL by Belleve Invis with reserved name Iosevka