Difference between revisions of "Documentation/Writer for Students/Fonts"

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For your '''Text body''' you should use a font with serifs. Serifs are the horizontal stroke at the tips of the letters, mostly coinciding with the base line as in the letters “i” or “m”, a few lying above as in “w” and another set placed below the line as for letters “p” and “q”. A few characters such as “o” have no serifs. A typical example of a serif font is '''<font face=Times New Roman, size=80%>Times New Roman</font>'''. These
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The right choice of fonts is important to increase overall legibility. There are thousands of fonts out there, but one main category are the fontswith serifs such as Times New Roman.
serifs have the effect of giving the letter some optical stability on the horizontal axis and also reducing the gaps between letters, thus making them to a degree “fuse together” so words become more compact instead of being a collection of individual letters as in the non-serif font '''<font face=Arial, size=80%>Arial</font>'''. The overall effect is to increase reading speed as you tend to seize complete words as units, your eyes jumping from one word to the next rather than from one letter to the next.  
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For main titles, posters, flyers etc., whose object it is precisely to attract more attention, fonts without serifs are very suitable.
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For your '''Text body''' you should use a font with serifs. Serifs are the horizontal stroke at the tips of the letters, mostly coinciding with the base line as in the letters “i” or “m”, a few lying above as in “w” and another set placed below the line as for letters “p” and “q”. A few characters such as “o” have no serifs. These serifs give the letters stability on the horizontal axis and also reduce the gaps between letters, so that words gain a more compact appearance. This in turn increases reading speed as you tend to seize complete words as units and not as loose collections of letters.
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For main titles, posters, flyers etc., whose object it is precisely to attract more attention, fonts without serifs such as '''Arial''' are very suitable. Here the object is precisely to slow down the pace of reading so as to attract more attention.
  
 
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[[File:wfs026a-fonts.png|none]]
 
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There exists a great variety of fonts. Futura Lt BT for example is lighter than Arial and marries well with Garamond which in turn is lighter than Times. Philosophically speaking you could say that Garamond has been stripped of any unnecessary fat, being reduced to the “mathematical minimum” necessary for rapid reading. It is also more rounded than Times giving it a less aggressive appearance. And in spite of its slightly reduced size in comparison with the latter it remains very legible.
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There exists a great variety of fonts within each. Futura Lt BT for example is lighter than Arial and marries well with Garamond which in turn islighter than Times.  
  
On the whole avoid using different fonts. Instead just vary font size and typeface (Regular, Italic, Bold and Bold Italic).
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Philosophically speaking you could say that Garamond has been stripped of any unnecessary fat, being reduced to the ‘mathematical minimum’ necessary for rapid reading. It is also more rounded than Times giving it a less aggressive appearance. And in spite of its slightly reduced dimensions at same font size it remains very legible.Of course you need to have these fonts installed on your computer. Some of them are unfortunately quite expensive.
  
If you’re using a page format of A4, you will probably want a font size of 12pt (or 11pt in case you do opt for Arial, which is by nature larger). If producing a pamphlet size A5 you can reduce the font size down to 11pt or even 10.5pt. The better the printer and the quality of paper, the more you can reduce the font size without the text becoming illegible.
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On the whole avoid using different fonts. Instead just vary font size and typeface.
  
{{Documentation/Note|''Note'': Sometimes lecturers give very detailed specifications as to number of pages, font type, font size, line spacing, margins and so on not so much for optical reasons but to control the overall amount of text produced. It would be simpler if they said: “Please limit yourself to 10,000 characters plus/minus five percent.” See section 46 on Document Infos.}}
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If you’re using a page format of A4, you will probably want a font size of 12pt (or 11pt in case you do opt for Arial, which is by nature larger). If producing a pamphlet size A5 you can reduce the font size down to 11pt or even 10.5pt. The better the printer and the quality of paper, the more you can reduce the font size without the text becoming illegible.
  
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{{Note|Sometimes lecturers give very detailed specifications as to number of pages, font type, font size, line spacing, margins and so on not so much for optical reasons but to control the overall amount of text produced. It would be simpler if they said: “Please limit yourself to 10,000 characters plus/minus five percent.” See section 44 on Document Infos.}}
 
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Latest revision as of 14:51, 7 July 2018



The right choice of fonts is important to increase overall legibility. There are thousands of fonts out there, but one main category are the fontswith serifs such as Times New Roman.

For your Text body you should use a font with serifs. Serifs are the horizontal stroke at the tips of the letters, mostly coinciding with the base line as in the letters “i” or “m”, a few lying above as in “w” and another set placed below the line as for letters “p” and “q”. A few characters such as “o” have no serifs. These serifs give the letters stability on the horizontal axis and also reduce the gaps between letters, so that words gain a more compact appearance. This in turn increases reading speed as you tend to seize complete words as units and not as loose collections of letters.

For main titles, posters, flyers etc., whose object it is precisely to attract more attention, fonts without serifs such as Arial are very suitable. Here the object is precisely to slow down the pace of reading so as to attract more attention.

Wfs026a-fonts.png

There exists a great variety of fonts within each. Futura Lt BT for example is lighter than Arial and marries well with Garamond which in turn islighter than Times.

Philosophically speaking you could say that Garamond has been stripped of any unnecessary fat, being reduced to the ‘mathematical minimum’ necessary for rapid reading. It is also more rounded than Times giving it a less aggressive appearance. And in spite of its slightly reduced dimensions at same font size it remains very legible.Of course you need to have these fonts installed on your computer. Some of them are unfortunately quite expensive.

On the whole avoid using different fonts. Instead just vary font size and typeface.

If you’re using a page format of A4, you will probably want a font size of 12pt (or 11pt in case you do opt for Arial, which is by nature larger). If producing a pamphlet size A5 you can reduce the font size down to 11pt or even 10.5pt. The better the printer and the quality of paper, the more you can reduce the font size without the text becoming illegible.

Documentation note.png Sometimes lecturers give very detailed specifications as to number of pages, font type, font size, line spacing, margins and so on not so much for optical reasons but to control the overall amount of text produced. It would be simpler if they said: “Please limit yourself to 10,000 characters plus/minus five percent.” See section 44 on Document Infos.




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