{ lib , stdenv , fetchzip , python3 , config , acceptLicense ? config.input-fonts.acceptLicense or false }: let throwLicense = throw '' Input is available free of charge for private/unpublished usage. This includes things like your personal coding app or for composing plain text documents. To use it, you need to agree to its license: https://input.djr.com/license/ You can express acceptance by setting acceptLicense to true in your configuration. Note that this is not a free license so it requires allowing unfree licenses. configuration.nix: nixpkgs.config.allowUnfree = true; nixpkgs.config.input-fonts.acceptLicense = true; config.nix: allowUnfree = true; input-fonts.acceptLicense = true; If you would like to support this project, consider purchasing a license at . ''; releaseDate = "2015-06-24"; in stdenv.mkDerivation rec { pname = "input-fonts"; version = "1.2"; src = assert !acceptLicense -> throwLicense; fetchzip { name = "input-fonts-${version}"; # Add .zip parameter so that zip unpackCmd can match it. url = "https://input.djr.com/build/?fontSelection=whole&a=0&g=0&i=0&l=0&zero=0&asterisk=0&braces=0&preset=default&line-height=1.2&accept=I+do&email=&.zip"; sha256 = "BESZ4Bjgm2hvQ7oPpMvYSlE8EqvQjqHZtXWIovqyIzA="; stripRoot = false; postFetch = '' # Reset the timestamp to release date for determinism. PATH=${lib.makeBinPath [ python3.pkgs.fonttools ]}:$PATH for ttf_file in $out/Input_Fonts/*/*/*.ttf; do ttx_file=$(dirname "$ttf_file")/$(basename "$ttf_file" .ttf).ttx ttx "$ttf_file" rm "$ttf_file" touch -m -t ${builtins.replaceStrings [ "-" ] [ "" ] releaseDate}0000 "$ttx_file" ttx --recalc-timestamp "$ttx_file" rm "$ttx_file" done ''; }; dontConfigure = true; dontBuild = true; installPhase = '' runHook preInstall mkdir -p $out/share/fonts/truetype find Input_Fonts -name "*.ttf" -exec cp -a {} "$out"/share/fonts/truetype/ \; mkdir -p "$out"/share/doc cp -a *.txt "$out"/share/doc/ runHook postInstall ''; meta = with lib; { description = "Fonts for Code, from Font Bureau"; longDescription = '' Input is a font family designed for computer programming, data, and text composition. It was designed by David Jonathan Ross between 2012 and 2014 and published by The Font Bureau. It contains a wide array of styles so you can fine-tune the typography that works best in your editing environment. Input Mono is a monospaced typeface, where all characters occupy a fixed width. Input Sans and Serif are proportional typefaces that are designed with all of the features of a good monospace — generous spacing, large punctuation, and easily distinguishable characters — but without the limitations of a fixed width. ''; homepage = "https://input.djr.com/"; license = licenses.unfree; maintainers = with maintainers; [ jtojnar romildo ]; platforms = platforms.all; }; }