Re: Proportional fonts

Subject: Re: Proportional fonts
From: Beth Mason <beth -dot- mason -at- MANTECH -dot- COM>
Date: Mon, 26 Jul 1999 17:06:24 -0400

>>> Bev Lockhart <bl -at- SEATTLELAB -dot- COM> queried: >>>
So where do I go to find out whether a font is proportional or not? (I'm
specifically curious about Ariel.)


I don 't know where you can go for a list of fonts, but it's pretty easy to tell just by looking, since proportional just means that the letters take up space in proportion to how wide they are. Ariel is proportional--you can tell by typing a word like "lime"--it's easy to see that the "m" takes up much more space than the skinny little "l" and "i" so you know it's proportional. In a non-proportional font (like Courier), every letter is allotted the same amount of space, regardless of its width. I would venture to say that most fonts you will encounter nowadays, and those used frequently, are proportional.

HTH.
Beth



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Beth Champion Mason
Senior Technical Writer/Editor
ManTech Systems Solutions Corp.
(757) 938-9377

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