Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Integrate Google Web Font selection into your apps


By Jeremie Lenfant-Engelmann, Google Web Fonts Engineer

We’ve received lots of requests from developers for a dynamic feed of the most recent web fonts offered via Google Web Fonts. Such a feed would ensure that you can incorporate Google Web Fonts into applications and menus dynamically, without the need to hardcode any URLs. The benefits of this approach are clear. As Google Web Fonts continues to add fonts, these fonts can become immediately available within your applications and sites.

To address this need, we’ve built the Google Web Fonts Developer API, which provides a list of fonts offered via Google Web Fonts. Results can be sorted by alpha, date added, popularity, number of styles available, and trending (which is a measure of fonts growing rapidly in usage). Check out the documentation to get started.

Some developers have helped us test this new API over the last few months, and the results are already public. Take a look at TypeDNA’s photoshop plugin as well as Faviconist, an app that makes generating favicons as simple as can be, and Google Web Fonts Families, a list of Google Web Fonts that have more than one style.

We look forward to seeing what you come up with!

Jeremie Lenfant-Engelmann is a Software Engineer on the Google Web Fonts team.

Posted by Scott Knaster, Editor

3 comments:

  1. Does that mean they will soon be more fonts available in google docs.

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  2. How can I create Devanagari fonts. do let me know.

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  3. How much should we wait for RTL (Right-to-Left) fonts(Persian, Arabic, etc.)? Is it take long? And basically, do you have any plane to add RTL fonts to Google Web fonts?!

    ReplyDelete