ScriptsMay 19, 2026·3 min read

Nerd Fonts — Iconic Patched Fonts for Developer Tooling

A curated aggregator and patcher that bundles 3,600+ icons into 50+ popular programming fonts, giving terminals, editors, and status bars consistent glyph coverage.

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Nerd Fonts
Universal CLI install command
npx tokrepo install c51a722f-539e-11f1-9bc6-00163e2b0d79

Introduction

Nerd Fonts patches popular monospaced typefaces with thousands of glyphs sourced from Font Awesome, Devicons, Octicons, Material Design Icons, and more. The result is a single font file that renders file-type icons, Git branch symbols, and powerline separators without extra font-fallback configuration. It is widely adopted by terminal prompt tools, file managers, and status-line plugins.

What Nerd Fonts Does

  • Patches 50+ fonts (Fira Code, JetBrains Mono, Hack, Cascadia Code, etc.) with a unified glyph set
  • Aggregates 3,600+ icons from 10+ upstream icon projects into a consistent codepoint mapping
  • Provides a standalone patcher script so users can patch any compatible font themselves
  • Publishes pre-built releases on GitHub and via Homebrew, Chocolatey, Scoop, and AUR
  • Ships a CSS web-font variant for browser-based terminal UIs

Architecture Overview

The project centers on a Python-based font patcher built on FontForge. It reads a source font, maps each upstream icon set to a reserved Private Use Area (PUA) codepoint range, and writes a new OpenType file. CI pipelines run the patcher against every supported font and publish release archives. A shell installer script automates download and system font registration.

Self-Hosting & Configuration

  • Clone the repo and run font-patcher with FontForge to patch a custom font
  • Use --complete flag to include all available glyph sets in a single pass
  • Set the patched font as your terminal emulator's default monospace typeface
  • For web use, reference the CSS file from css/nerd-fonts-generated.css
  • Most Linux desktops pick up fonts placed in ~/.local/share/fonts after running fc-cache -fv

Key Features

  • Consistent codepoint mapping across all patched fonts for portable dotfile configs
  • Supports ligature-enabled fonts like Fira Code and JetBrains Mono
  • Works with every major terminal: iTerm2, Alacritty, Kitty, WezTerm, Windows Terminal
  • Powers prompt tools like Starship, Oh My Posh, and Powerlevel10k out of the box
  • Available via all major OS package managers and font distribution channels

Comparison with Similar Tools

  • Powerline Fonts — only includes powerline glyphs; Nerd Fonts adds thousands more icons
  • FiraCode (upstream) — provides ligatures but no icon glyphs; Nerd Fonts patches icons in
  • Codicons — VS Code's icon font; scoped to the editor, not general terminal use
  • Font Awesome — a standalone icon font for web; Nerd Fonts integrates it alongside many others
  • Iosevka — a customizable coding font with optional ligatures; Nerd Fonts can patch Iosevka too

FAQ

Q: Do patched fonts break ligatures? A: No. The patcher preserves the original font's OpenType ligature tables while adding icons in unused codepoint slots.

Q: How large are patched font files? A: A complete-patched font is typically 5-15 MB per weight, versus 0.5-2 MB for the unpatched original.

Q: Can I patch a proprietary font I have a license for? A: The patcher works on any compatible font file. License compliance for redistribution is your responsibility.

Q: Which font should I start with? A: FiraCode Nerd Font and JetBrainsMono Nerd Font are the most popular choices among developers.

Sources

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