

FontForge, at the time, was Linux only.More on glyphs - FontForge 20201107 documentatio A Spline consists of 4 points: 2 end points of the spline and 2 'handles', which describe the slope of the spline at those end points 4. It might be that there is an open dialog box hidden behind it - so just move it and process the dialog box. Im posting the notes on different interactions I thought that could work Caution: Sometimes, it seems like FontForge is not responding when you are inside the Glyph Window. and If you could comment I can work on a mockup in coming weeks. So I next step is to implement multi line glyph editing :) would have some time later this month to work on this. Closing #879 introduced the basic multi glyph editing to FontForge. Afterwards, I save the font as a FontForge file (just to be sure) through File → Save as. I move an anchor point to a random location (you can change two anchor points to be sure). To edit the glyph, I open up FontForge¹ and double click any glyph.

Typing a glyph will move to that glyph I can change any glyph, say the capital letter A. Simply scroll around it until you find the glyph you need and then double click on it to open a window looking at that glyph. The font view provides one way of navigating around the glyphs in a font. More on glyphs - FontForge 20201107 documentation.
