- Unicode Fonts For Mac Os X 10 13 Download
- Unicode Fonts For Mac Os X 10 11
- Install Fonts Mac Os X
- Fonts For Mac
- Unicode Fonts For Mac Os X
- Free Calligraphy Fonts For Mac
Unicode fonts for Macintosh OS 9 computers
- Availability: Free download from Unicode Fonts for Ancient Scripts or from my Downloads page; CuneiformComposite – 986 glyphs in version 1.001 Ranges: Basic Latin (1); Cuneiform (879); Cuneiform Numbers and Punctuation (103) Styles: Regular Availability: Free download from Unicode Fonts for Oracc An early version of this font was called cc500d1.
- Buy Arial Unicode MS Regular desktop font from Monotype on Fonts.com.
The Safari browser for Mac OS X also renders Unicode Nepali correctly. If you are having difficulties viewing Nepali Unicode on an Apple Mac, read Alan Wood's helpful comments on setting up your browser to view Unicode fonts.
The Macintosh operating system has included Unicode support since version 8.5, and this allows applications to see and use characters in both Macintosh and Windows TrueType fonts that are outside the 233 characters in the MacRoman character set. Sadly, there are very few applications that are able to access these extra characters. Adobe InDesign can use the extra characters in Macintosh Unicode fonts, but it does not support the keyboard drivers in Apple’s Language Kits, and the only way to enter the extra characters is to use the Insert Characters dialog box, available from the Type menu. The WorldText text editor and 2 experimental applications (MLTE Demo and SUE) have implemented the facility to use Windows Unicode fonts under Mac OS 9. The Web browser Opera 6 can use Unicode resource-fork fonts
Mac OS 9 is supplied with several Unicode TrueType fonts that contain more characters than you can normally see, Microsoft supplies a Unicode TrueType version of Tahoma with Word 98 and Office 98, and Adobe supplies a Unicode OpenType version of TektonPro with InDesign 1.5.
Most of the Macintosh applications that include Unicode support require Apple’s Language Kits, which employ proprietary character sets and map to and from Unicode as necessary. This applies to the Web browsers iCab, Internet Explorer and Netscape, the HTML editors BBEdit 6 and Muwse, and Microsoft Word 98 and Word 2001.
You need Unicode fonts (or mapping via Language Kits) to display many of the characters for which there are HTML 4.0 character entity references, and to display the Unicode test pages.
You can find out if your Macintosh TrueType fonts support Unicode by using TrueEdit and examining the cmap table.
The following list of Unicode fonts is probably not comprehensive, it is just the ones that I have acquired with Mac OS 9 on my iMac and various retail and trial applications. Not all of the characters in a given range will always be present in a font; you can use a utility such as True Edit to see exactly which characters are included. Some fonts contain a few characters from ranges that are not listed, extra glyphs such as lower-case numerals, and non-Unicode characters. You can find details of a few more resource-fork fonts that work with OS 9 on the page about fonts for Mac OS X 10.
Latin Fonts
- Apple Chancery – 1055 glyphs in version 3.1.2b8
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Spacing Modifier Letters; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Superscripts and Subscripts; Currency Symbols; Mathematical Operators
Family: Cursive
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 - Capitals – 442 glyphs in version 3.1.2b4
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Spacing Modifier Letters; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Currency Symbols; Arrows; Mathematical Operators
Family: Fantasy
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 - Charcoal – 455 glyphs in version 3.1.2b8
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Spacing Modifier Letters; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Currency Symbols; Arrows; Mathematical Operators
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 - Charcoal CE – 422 glyphs in version 3.5a2
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Arrows; Mathematical Operators
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Central European Language Kit - Chicago – 433 glyphs in version 3.1.2b8
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Spacing Modifier Letters; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Currency Symbols; Arrows; Mathematical Operators
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 - Chicago CE – 387 glyphs in version 3.0
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; General Punctuation; Arrows; Mathematical Operators
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Central European Language Kit - Courier – 384 glyphs in version 3.5a1
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Mathematical Operators
Family: Monospace
Styles: Regular, Oblique, Bold, Bold Oblique
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 - Courier CE – 384 glyphs in version 3.5a2
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Mathematical Operators
Family: Monospace
Styles: Regular, Bold
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Central European Language Kit - Gadget – 456 glyphs in version 3.1.2b8
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Spacing Modifier Letters; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Currency Symbols; Arrows; Mathematical Operators
Family: Fantasy
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 - Geneva – 396 glyphs in version 3.1.2b8
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Spacing Modifier Letters; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Currency Symbols; Mathematical Operators
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 - Geneva CE – 381 glyphs in version 3.5a2
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Mathematical Operators
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Central European Language Kit - Helvetica – 384 glyphs in version 3.5a3
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Currency Symbols; Mathematical Operators
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular, Oblique, Bold, Bold Oblique
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 - Helvetica CE – 384 glyphs in version 3.5a2
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Mathematical Operators
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular, Bold
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Central European Language Kit - Hoefler Text – 433 glyphs in version 3.1.2b8
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Spacing Modifier Letters; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Superscripts and Subscripts; Currency Symbols; Arrows; Mathematical Operators
Family: Serif
Styles: Regular, Italic, Black, Black Italic
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 - Monaco – 391 glyphs in version 3.1.2b8
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Spacing Modifier Letters; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Currency Symbols; Mathematical Operators
Family: Monospace
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 - Monaco CE – 383 glyphs
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Mathematical Operators
Family: Monospace
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Central European Language Kit - New York – 396 glyphs in version 3.1.2b8
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Spacing Modifier Letters; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Currency Symbols; Mathematical Operators
Family: Serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 - Palatino – 381 glyphs in version 3.1.2b4
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Spacing Modifier Letters; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Mathematical Operators
Family: Serif
Styles: Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 - Palatino CE – 384 glyphs in version 3.5a2
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Mathematical Operators
Family: Serif
Styles: Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Central European Language Kit - Sand – 453 glyphs in version 3.1.2b8
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Spacing Modifier Letters; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Currency Symbols; Arrows; Mathematical Operators
Family: Fantasy
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 - Skia – 544 glyphs in version 3.1.2b8
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Spacing Modifier Letters; General Punctuation; Superscripts and Subscripts; Currency Symbols; Mathematical Operators
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 - Tahoma – 987 glyphs in version 1.85
Platforms: Macintosh and Windows
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Spacing Modifier Letters; Combining Diacritical Marks; Greek; Cyrillic; Hebrew; Arabic; Latin Extended Additional; General Punctuation; Currency Symbols; Mathematical Operators; Alphabetic Presentation Forms; Arabic Presentation Forms-A; Arabic Presentation Forms-B
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular, Bold
Availability: Supplied with Word 98 and Office 98, in the Fonts folder in the Value Pack folder on the CD-ROM - Techno – 456 glyphs in version 3.1.2b8
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Spacing Modifier Letters; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Currency Symbols; Arrows; Mathematical Operators
Family: Fantasy
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 - Textile – 435 glyphs in version 3.1.2b4
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Spacing Modifier Letters; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Currency Symbols; Arrows; Mathematical Operators
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 - Times – 381 glyphs in version 3.1.2b4
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Spacing Modifier Letters; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Currency Symbols; Mathematical Operators
Family: Serif
Styles: Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 - Times CE – 384 glyphs in version 3.5a2
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement; Latin Extended-A; Combining Diacritical Marks; General Punctuation; Mathematical Operators
Family: Serif
Styles: Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Central European Language Kit
Arabic Fonts
- AB AlBayan (Al Bayan) – 259 glyphs in version 93/12/27
Ranges: Basic Latin (punctuation); Arabic; Arabic Presentation Forms-A; Arabic Presentation Forms-B
Family: Cursive
Styles: Plain, Bold
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9, in CD Extras/Language Kits CD Extras/Arabic.img - AB Baghdad (Baghdad) – 257 glyphs in version 18/12/95
Ranges: Basic Latin (punctuation); Arabic; Arabic Presentation Forms-A; Arabic Presentation Forms-B
Family: Cursive
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9, in CD Extras/Language Kits CD Extras/Arabic.img - AB Geeza (Geezah) – 286 glyphs in version 17/12/98
Ranges: Basic Latin (punctuation); Arabic; Arabic Presentation Forms-A; Arabic Presentation Forms-B
Family: Cursive
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 Arabic Language Kit - AB Kufi (KufiStandardGK) – 257 glyphs in version 18/12/95
Ranges: Basic Latin (punctuation); Arabic; Arabic Presentation Forms-A; Arabic Presentation Forms-B
Family: Cursive
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9, in CD Extras/Language Kits CD Extras/Arabic.img - AB Nadeem (Nadeem) – 263 glyphs in version 18/12/95
Ranges: Basic Latin (punctuation); Arabic; Arabic Presentation Forms-A; Arabic Presentation Forms-B
Family: Cursive
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9, in CD Extras/Language Kits CD Extras/Arabic.img - DecoType Naskh – 256 glyphs in version 3.5d5e2
Ranges: Basic Latin (punctuation); Arabic; Arabic Presentation Forms-A; Arabic Presentation Forms-B
Family: Cursive
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Arabic Language Kit - Tahoma can also display Arabic
Chinese (Simplified) Fonts
- Beijing – 8342 glyphs in version CH-3.0
Ranges: Basic Latin; Greek; Cyrillic; Mathematical Operators; Enclosed Alphanumerics; Box Drawing; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Hiragana; Katakana; Bopomfo; Enclosed CJK Letters and Months (few); CJK Unified Ideographs; CJK Compatibility Forms; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Simplified Chinese Language Kit - Fang Song – 7720 glyphs in version 3.5d2e1
Ranges: Basic Latin; Greek; Cyrillic; Mathematical Operators; Enclosed Alphanumerics; Box Drawing; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Hiragana; Katakana; Bopomfo; Enclosed CJK Letters and Months (few); CJK Unified Ideographs; CJK Compatibility Forms; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Simplified Chinese Language Kit - Hei – 7720 glyphs in version 3.5d2e1
Ranges: Basic Latin; Greek; Cyrillic; Mathematical Operators; Enclosed Alphanumerics; Box Drawing; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Hiragana; Katakana; Bopomfo; Enclosed CJK Letters and Months (few); CJK Unified Ideographs; CJK Compatibility Forms; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Simplified Chinese Language Kit - Kai – 7720 glyphs in version 3.5d2e1
Ranges: Basic Latin; Greek; Cyrillic; Mathematical Operators; Enclosed Alphanumerics; Box Drawing; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Hiragana; Katakana; Bopomfo; Enclosed CJK Letters and Months (few); CJK Unified Ideographs; CJK Compatibility Forms; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Simplified Chinese Language Kit - Song – 7720 glyphs in version 3.5d2e1
Ranges: Basic Latin; Greek; Cyrillic; Mathematical Operators; Enclosed Alphanumerics; Box Drawing; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Hiragana; Katakana; Bopomfo; Enclosed CJK Letters and Months (few); CJK Unified Ideographs; CJK Compatibility Forms; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Simplified Chinese Language Kit
Chinese (Traditional) Fonts
Unicode Fonts For Mac Os X 10 13 Download
- Apple LiGothic – 13,693 glyphs in version 3.7d3
Ranges: Basic Latin; Greek; Mathematical Operators; Box Drawing; Block Elements; Geometric Shapes; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Bopomofo; CJK Compatibility (few); CJK Unified Ideographs; CJK Compatibility Forms; Small Form Variants; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Medium
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Traditional Chinese Language Kit - Apple LiSung – 13,692 glyphs in version 3.7d3
Ranges: Basic Latin; Greek; Mathematical Operators; Box Drawing; Block Elements; Geometric Shapes; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Bopomofo; CJK Compatibility (few); CJK Unified Ideographs; CJK Compatibility Forms; Small Form Variants; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Serif
Styles: Light
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Traditional Chinese Language Kit - BiauKai – 13,692 glyphs in version TA-3.0
Ranges: Basic Latin; Greek; Mathematical Operators; Box Drawing; Block Elements; Geometric Shapes; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Bopomofo; CJK Compatibility (few); CJK Unified Ideographs; CJK Compatibility Forms; Small Form Variants; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Traditional Chinese Language Kit - Taipei – 13,688 glyphs in version TA-3.0
Ranges: Basic Latin; Greek; Mathematical Operators; Box Drawing; Block Elements; Geometric Shapes; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Bopomofo; CJK Compatibility (few); CJK Unified Ideographs; CJK Compatibility Forms; Small Form Variants; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Traditional Chinese Language Kit
Cyrillic Fonts
- Charcoal CY – 251 glyphs
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement (symbols and punctuation); Cyrillic; General Punctuation
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Cyrillic Language Kit - Chicago CY – 233 glyphs
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement (symbols and punctuation); Cyrillic; General Punctuation
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Cyrillic Language Kit - Geneva CY – 233 glyphs
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement (symbols and punctuation); Cyrillic; General Punctuation
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Cyrillic Language Kit - Helvetica CY – 232 glyphs
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement (symbols and punctuation); Cyrillic; General Punctuation
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Cyrillic Language Kit - Latinskij – 229 glyphs
Ranges: Basic Latin; Cyrillic
Family: Serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 Cyrillic Language Kit - Monaco CY – 232 glyphs
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement (symbols and punctuation); Cyrillic; General Punctuation
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Cyrillic Language Kit - PriamojProp – 229 glyphs
Ranges: Basic Latin; Cyrillic
Family: Monospace
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 Cyrillic Language Kit - Times CY – 233 glyphs
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement (symbols and punctuation); Cyrillic; General Punctuation
Family: Serif
Styles: Regular, Italic, Bold, BoldItalic
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Cyrillic Language Kit - AppleGothic, AppleMyungjo, Beijing, ChuGothic, Fang Song, Gungseouche, Hei, HeiseiMincho, Kai, Osaka, Osaka-Mono, Pilgiche, SaiMincho, Seoul, Song and Tahoma can also display Cyrillic
Devanagari Fonts
- Devanagari MT – 537 glyphs in version 1.0
Ranges: Basic Latin (numbers and punctuation); Devanagari
Styles: Regular, Bold
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 Devanagari Language Kit - Devanagari MTS – 537 glyphs in version 1.0
Ranges: Basic Latin (numbers and punctuation); Devanagari
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 Devanagari Language Kit
Gujarati Fonts
- Gujarati MT – 459 glyphs in version 1.0
Ranges: Basic Latin (numbers and punctuation); Gujarati
Styles: Regular, Bold
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 Gujarati Language Kit - Gujarati MTS – 459 glyphs in version 1.0
Ranges: Basic Latin (numbers and punctuation); Gujarati
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 Gujarati Language Kit
Gurmukhi Fonts
- Gurmukhi MT – 180 glyphs in version 1.0
Ranges: Basic Latin (numbers and punctuation); Gurmukhi
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 Gurmukhi Language Kit - Gurmukhi MTS – 180 glyphs in version 1.0
Ranges: Basic Latin (numbers and punctuation); Gurmukhi
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 Gurmukhi Language Kit
Hebrew Fonts
- HB Arial (Arial Hebrew) – 177 glyphs in version 1.1
Ranges: Basic Latin (numbers and punctuation); Hebrew; Alphabetic Presentation Forms
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular, Bold
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 Hebrew Language Kit - HB Corsiva (Corsiva Hebrew) – 177 glyphs in version 1.2
Ranges: Basic Latin (numbers and punctuation); Hebrew; Alphabetic Presentation Forms
Family: Cursive
Styles: Regular, Bold
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9, in CD Extras/Language Kits CD Extras/Hebrew.img - HB New Peninim (New Peninim MT) – 177 glyphs in version 1.1
Ranges: Basic Latin (numbers and punctuation); Hebrew; Alphabetic Presentation Forms
Family: Serif
Styles: Regular, Inclined, Bold, Bold Inclined
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9 Hebrew Language Kit - HB Raanana (Raanana) – 196 glyphs in version 1.1
Ranges: Basic Latin (numbers and punctuation); Hebrew; Alphabetic Presentation Forms
Family: Serif
Styles: Regular, Bold
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9, in CD Extras/Language Kits CD Extras/Hebrew.img - Tahoma can also display Hebrew
Japanese Fonts
- ChuGothic – 7250 glyphs in version 3.2
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement (few); Greek; Cyrillic; General Punctuation; Mathematical Operators; Box Drawing; Geometric Shapes; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Hiragana; Katakana; CJK Unified Ideographs; CJK Compatibility Forms; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2, in the CD Extras/Language Kits CD Extras/Japanese/Fonts folder - HeiseiKakuGothic – 7905 glyphs in version 3.4.1
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement (few); Greek; Cyrillic; General Punctuation; Number Forms; Arrows; Mathematical Operators; Enclosed Alphanumerics; Box Drawing; Geometric Shapes; Miscellaneous Symbols; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Hiragana; Katakana; Enclosed CJK Letters and Months; CJK Compatibility; CJK Unified Ideographs; CJK Compatibility Forms; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: W5
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Japanese Language Kit - HeiseiMincho – 7903 glyphs in version 3.4.1
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement (few); Greek; Cyrillic; General Punctuation; Number Forms; Arrows; Mathematical Operators; Enclosed Alphanumerics; Box Drawing; Geometric Shapes; Miscellaneous Symbols; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Hiragana; Katakana; Enclosed CJK Letters and Months; CJK Compatibility; CJK Unified Ideographs; CJK Compatibility Forms; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Serif
Styles: W3
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Japanese Language Kit - Osaka – 8121 glyphs in version 4.2
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement (few); Greek; Cyrillic; General Punctuation; Number Forms; Arrows; Mathematical Operators; Enclosed Alphanumerics; Box Drawing; Geometric Shapes; Miscellaneous Symbols; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Hiragana; Katakana; Enclosed CJK Letters and Months; CJK Compatibility; CJK Unified Ideographs; CJK Compatibility Forms; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Japanese Language Kit - Osaka-Mono – 7431 glyphs in version 3.3.2
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement (few); Greek; Cyrillic; General Punctuation; Number Forms; Arrows; Mathematical Operators; Enclosed Alphanumerics; Box Drawing; Geometric Shapes; Miscellaneous Symbols; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Hiragana; Katakana; Enclosed CJK Letters and Months; CJK Compatibility; CJK Unified Ideographs; CJK Compatibility Forms; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Monospace (Latin); Sans-serif (Japanese)
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Japanese Language Kit - SaiMincho – 7250 glyphs in version 3.2
Ranges: Basic Latin; Latin-1 Supplement (few); Greek; Cyrillic; General Punctuation; Mathematical Operators; Box Drawing; Geometric Shapes; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Hiragana; Katakana; CJK Unified Ideographs; CJK Compatibility Forms; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2, in the CD Extras/Language Kits CD Extras/Japanese/Fonts folder
Korean Fonts
- AppleGothic – 10,625 glyphs in version 3.7d3
Ranges: Basic Latin; Greek; Cyrillic; Number Forms; Arrows; Mathematical Operators; Enclosed Alphanumerics; Box Drawing; Geometric Shapes; Miscellaneous Symbols; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Hiragana; Katakana; Hangul Compatibility Jamo; Enclosed CJK Letters and Months; CJK Compatibility; CJK Unified Ideographs; Hangul Syllables; CJK Compatibility Ideographs; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Korean Language Kit - AppleMyungjo – 10,625 glyphs in version 3.7d1
Ranges: Basic Latin; Greek; Cyrillic; Number Forms; Arrows; Mathematical Operators; Enclosed Alphanumerics; Box Drawing; Geometric Shapes; Miscellaneous Symbols; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Hiragana; Katakana; Hangul Compatibility Jamo; Enclosed CJK Letters and Months; CJK Compatibility; CJK Unified Ideographs; Hangul Syllables; CJK Compatibility Ideographs; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Korean Language Kit - Gungseouche – 9961 glyphs in version 3.7d2
Ranges: Basic Latin; Greek; Cyrillic; Number Forms; Arrows; Mathematical Operators; Enclosed Alphanumerics; Box Drawing; Geometric Shapes; Miscellaneous Symbols; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Hiragana; Katakana; Hangul Compatibility Jamo; Enclosed CJK Letters and Months; CJK Compatibility; CJK Unified Ideographs; Hangul Syllables; CJK Compatibility Ideographs; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Korean Language Kit - Pilgiche – 5082 glyphs in version 3.7d3
Ranges: Basic Latin; Greek; Cyrillic; Number Forms; Arrows; Mathematical Operators; Enclosed Alphanumerics; Box Drawing; Geometric Shapes; Miscellaneous Symbols; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Hiragana; Katakana; Hangul Compatibility Jamo; Enclosed CJK Letters and Months; CJK Compatibility; Hangul Syllables; CJK Compatibility Ideographs; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Cursive
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Korean Language Kit - Seoul – 9984 glyphs in version 3.7d1
Ranges: Basic Latin; Greek; Cyrillic; Number Forms; Arrows; Mathematical Operators; Enclosed Alphanumerics; Box Drawing; Geometric Shapes; Miscellaneous Symbols; CJK Symbols and Punctuation; Hiragana; Katakana; Hangul Compatibility Jamo; Enclosed CJK Letters and Months; CJK Compatibility; CJK Unified Ideographs; Hangul Syllables; CJK Compatibility Ideographs; Halfwidth and Fullwidth Forms
Family: Sans-serif
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2 Korean Language Kit
Persian Fonts
- PS Amir – 257 glyphs in version 18/12/95
Ranges: Basic Latin (punctuation); Arabic; Arabic Presentation Forms-A; Arabic Presentation Forms-B
Family: Cursive
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2, in the CD Extras/Language Kits CD Extras/Persian/Fonts folder - PS Asfahan – 257 glyphs in version 18/12/95
Ranges: Basic Latin (punctuation); Arabic; Arabic Presentation Forms-A; Arabic Presentation Forms-B
Family: Cursive
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2, in the CD Extras/Language Kits CD Extras/Persian/Fonts folder - PS Kamran – 257 glyphs in version 20/12/95
Ranges: Basic Latin (punctuation); Arabic; Arabic Presentation Forms-A; Arabic Presentation Forms-B
Family: Cursive
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2, in the CD Extras/Language Kits CD Extras/Persian/Fonts folder - PS Mashad – 257 glyphs in version 18/12/95
Ranges: Basic Latin (punctuation); Arabic; Arabic Presentation Forms-A; Arabic Presentation Forms-B
Family: Cursive
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2, in the CD Extras/Language Kits CD Extras/Persian/Fonts folder - PS NadeemFarsi – 257 glyphs in version 20/12/95
Ranges: Basic Latin (punctuation); Arabic; Arabic Presentation Forms-A; Arabic Presentation Forms-B
Family: Cursive
Styles: Regular
Availability: Included with Mac OS 9.2, in the CD Extras/Language Kits CD Extras/Persian/Fonts folder
Links to font-related and language-related Web sites
Copyright © 2000–2003 Alan Wood
Created 23rd October 2000 Last updated 20th June 2003
Created 23rd October 2000 Last updated 20th June 2003
Apple's Macintosh computer supports a wide variety of fonts. This support was one of the features that initially distinguished it from other systems.
Fonts[edit]
System fonts[edit]
The primary system font in OS X El Capitan and above is San Francisco. OS X Yosemite used Helvetica Neue, and preceding versions largely employed Lucida Grande. For labels and other small text, 10 pt Lucida Grande was typically used. Lucida Grande is almost identical in appearance to the prevalent Windows font Lucida Sans, and contains a larger variety of glyphs.
MacOS ships with multiple typefaces, for multiple scripts, licensed from several sources. MacOS includes Roman, Japanese and Chinese fonts. It also supports sophisticated font techniques, such as ligatures and filtering.
Many of the classic Macintosh typefaces included with previous versions remained available, including the serif typefaces New York, Palatino, and Times, the sans-serif Charcoal and Chicago, Monaco, Geneva and Helvetica. Courier, a monospaced font, also remained.[1]
In the initial publicly released version of Mac OS X (March 2001), font support for scripts was limited to Lucida Grande and a few fonts for the major Japanese scripts. With each major revision of the OS, fonts supporting additional scripts were added.
Zapfino[edit]
Demonstration of alternate letters, including the full-word ligature for the name of the Zapfino typeface
Zapfino is a calligraphic typeface designed by and named after renowned typeface designer Hermann Zapf for Linotype.[2][3] Zapfino utilizes advanced typographic features of the Apple Advanced Typography (AAT) 'morx' table format and is included in OS X partially as a technology demo. Ligatures and character variations are extensively used. The font is based on a calligraphic example by Zapf in 1944. The version included with macOS is a single weight. Since then, Linotype has introduced “Linotype Zapfino Extra” which includes the additional “Forte” weight with more options and alternates.
Several of the GX fonts that Apple commissioned and originally shipped with System 7.5 were ported to use AAT and shipped with Mac OS X 10.2 and 10.3. Hoefler Text, Apple Chancery and Skia are examples of fonts of this heritage. Other typefaces were licensed from the general offerings of leading font vendors.
LastResort[edit]
Sample glyphs from the LastResort font.
The LastResort font is invisible to the end user, but is used by the system to display reference glyphs in the event that glyphs needed to display a given character are not found in any other available font. The symbols provided by the LastResort font place glyphs into categories based on their location in the Unicode system and provide a hint to the user about which font or script is required to view unavailable characters. Designed by Apple and extended by Michael Everson of Evertype for Unicode 4.1 coverage, the symbols adhere to a unified design. The glyphs are square with rounded corners with a bold outline. On the left and right sides of the outline, the Unicode range that the character belongs to is given using hexadecimal digits. Top and bottom are used for one or two descriptions of the Unicode block name. A symbol representative of the block is centered inside the square. The typeface used for the text cutouts in the outline is Chicago, otherwise not included with macOS. LastResort has been part of Mac OS since version 8.5, but the limited success of Apple Type Services for Unicode Imaging (ATSUI) on the classic Mac OS means that only users of macOS are regularly exposed to it.
Lucida Grande[edit]
Of the fonts that ship with macOS, Lucida Grande has the broadest character repertoire. This font provides a relatively complete set of Arabic, Roman, Cyrillic, Hebrew, Thai and Greek letters and an assortment of common symbols. All in all, it contains a bit more than 2800 glyphs (including ligatures).
In macOS v10.3 ('Panther'), a font called Apple Symbols was introduced. It complements the set of symbols from Lucida Grande, but also contains glyphs only accessible by glyph ID (that is, they have not been assigned Unicode code points). A hidden font called .Keyboard contains 92 visible glyphs, most of which appear on Apple keyboards.
Font management[edit]
System 6.0.8 and earlier[edit]
Originally, the Macintosh QuickDraw system software supported only bitmapped fonts. The original font set was custom designed for the Macintosh and was intended to provide a screen legibility. These system fonts were named after large cities, e.g. New York, Chicago, and Geneva. (See Fonts of the Original Macintosh.)
Bitmapped fonts were stored as resources within the System file. A utility called Font/DA Mover was used to install fonts into or remove fonts from the System file. Fonts could be embedded into Macintosh applications and other file types, such as a HyperCard stack. Unused fonts were stored in a suitcase file.
The ImageWriter printer supported a higher resolution mode where bitmap fonts with twice the screen resolution were automatically substituted for 'near letter quality' printing. (For example, a 24-point bitmapped font would be used for 12-point printing.) This feature was sometimes called two-times font printing. Some later Apple QuickDraw-based laser printers supported four-times font printing for letter quality output.
With the introduction of the LaserWriter and support for PostScript-compatible printers, the Mac system software initially supported outline fonts for printing only. These outline fonts could be printed in letter quality at any size. PostScript fonts came with two files; a bitmap font was installed into the System file, and an outline font file was stored in the System Folder. Some of the bitmapped “city” fonts were automatically replaced by PostScript fonts by the printer driver. Commercial typefaces such as Times and Helvetica began to be distributed by Apple, Adobe Systems and others.
The Adobe Type Manager (ATM) system extension allowed PostScript outline fonts to be displayed on screen and used with all printers (PostScript or not). This allowed for true WYSIWYG printing in a much broader set of circumstances than the base system software, however with a noticeable speed penalty, especially on Motorola 68000-based machines.
After the release of System 7, Apple added System 6 support for TrueType outline fonts through a freely available system extension, providing functionality similar to ATM. Apple provided TrueType outline files for the bitmapped 'city' system fonts, allowing letter quality WYSIWYG printing.
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A reboot was required after installing new fonts unless using a font management utility such as Suitcase, FontJuggler or MasterJuggler.
System 7 – Mac OS 9[edit]
A highly touted feature of System 7 was integrated TrueType outline font support, which received industry support from Microsoft. Fonts were still stored in the System file but could be installed using drag-and-drop. To install new fonts, one had to quit all applications.
Despite this, ATM and PostScript Type 1 fonts continued to be widely used, especially for professional desktop publishing. Eventually Adobe released a free version of their utility, called ATM Light.
In System 7.1, a separate Fonts folder appeared in the System Folder. Fonts were automatically installed when dropped on the System Folder, and became available to applications after they were restarted. Font resources were generally grouped in suitcase files. However, rules for storing printer fonts varied greatly between different system, printer and application configurations until the advent of the new Fonts folder. Typically, they had to be stored directly in the System Folder or in the Extensions Folder.
System 7.5 added the QuickDraw GX graphics engine. TrueType GX supported ligatures and other advanced typography features. However little software supported these features and PostScript remained the standard.
Starting with Mac OS 8.5, the operating system supported data fork fonts, including Windows TrueType and OpenType. In addition, Apple created a new format, called PostScript variant.
Fonts in the /System/Library/Fonts folder and the /Library/Fonts folder are available to all users. Fonts stored in a user's ~/Library/Fonts folder are available to only that user. Previously, up to OS X 10.4, both Mac OS 9 applications running in the legacy Classic Environment and native applications could access fonts stored in the Mac OS 9 system folder
macOS includes a software rasterizer that supports PostScript. Thus eliminating the need for the Adobe Type Manager Light program. The built-in text editing supports advanced typesetting features such as adjustable kerning and baseline, as well as a few OpenType features.
Support for QuickDraw GX fonts was dropped in macOS in favor of TrueType fonts using AAT features. Bitmap fonts are only used on screen if there is a corresponding vector form (which is always used in printing).
Since OS X v10.3 (Panther), a utility called Font Book has been included with the operating system allowing users to easily install fonts and do basic font management.
Third-party font managers[edit]
As desktop publishing took off and PostScript and other outline font formats joined the bitmap fonts, the need for unified font management grew. A number of third parties have created tools, such as Suitcase, for managing font sets. For example, they allowed enabling or disabling fonts on-the-fly, and storing fonts outside of their normal locations. Some even allow the use of Windows .ttf font files natively on systems prior to macOS.
Font technology[edit]
TrueType and PostScript[edit]
TrueType is an outline font standard developed by Apple in the late 1980s, and later licensed to Microsoft, as a competitor to Adobe's Type 1 fonts used in PostScript, which dominated desktop publishing.
The outlines of the characters in TrueType fonts are made of straight line segments and quadratic Bézier curves, rather than the cubic Bézier curves in Type 1 fonts. While the underlying mathematics of TrueType is thus simpler, many type developers prefer to work with cubic curves because they are easier to draw and edit.
While earlier versions of the Mac OS required additional software to work with Type 1 fonts (as well as at least one bitmap copy of each Type 1 font to be used), macOS now includes native support for a variety of font technologies, including both TrueType and PostScript Type 1.
Microsoft, together with Adobe, created an extended TrueType format, called OpenType. Apple, however, continued to develop TrueType. A 'Zapf' table, for example, maps composite glyphs to characters and vice versa and adds other features. The table was named after typeface creator Hermann Zapf with permission.[3]
QuickDraw GX[edit]
QuickDraw GX was a complete overhaul of the Macintosh graphics system, including the font system, which was rolled out for System 7.5 in 1995. QuickDraw GX fonts could be in either TrueType or PostScript Type 1 formats and included additional information about the glyphs and their purpose. Advanced features, such as ligatures, glyph variations, kerning information and small caps, could be used by any GX enabled application. Previously, they had typically been reserved for advanced typesetting applications.
Microsoft was refused a license to GX technology and chose to develop OpenType instead. GX typography and GX technology as a whole never saw widespread adoption. Support for GX was dropped in later versions.
AAT covers much of the same ground as OpenType. It incorporates concepts from the Multiple Master font format, which allows multiple axes of traits to be defined and an n-dimensional number of glyphs to be accessible within that space. AAT features do not alter the underlying characters, but do affect their representation during glyph conversion.
AAT is supported in IBM’s open source ICU library, which implements support for AAT fonts under Linux and other open source operating systems.
Hinting technology[edit]
Hinting is the process by which TrueType fonts are adjusted to the limited resolution of a screen or a relatively low resolution printer. Undesired features in the rendered text, such as lack of symmetry or broken strokes, can be reduced. Hinting is performed by a virtual machine that distorts the control points that define the glyph shapes so that they fit the grid defined by the screen better. Hinting is particularly important when rendering text at low effective resolution: that is, with few pixels per character.
Hinting is part of the TrueType specification, but Apple held three patents in the United States relating to the process:
- US 5155805 'Method and apparatus for moving control points in displaying digital typeface on raster output devices' (filed May 8, 1989)
- US 5159668 'Method and apparatus for manipulating outlines in improving digital typeface on raster output devices' (filed May 8, 1989)
- US 5325479 'Method and apparatus for moving control points in displaying digital typeface on raster output devices' (filed May 28, 1992)
Until they expired, Apple offered licensing of these patents. Microsoft had access to Apple's TrueType patents through cross-licensing. These patents have proven problematic to developers and vendors of open source software for TrueType rendering, such as FreeType. To avoid infringing on the patents, some software disregarded the hinting information present in fonts, resulting in visual artefacts. FreeType developed an automatic hinting engine, but it is difficult to beat the explicit hinting guidelines provided by the typeface designer. The problem of lacking hinting could also be compensated for by using anti-aliasing, although a combination of the two produces the best result.
Subpixel rendering[edit]
A sample of text rendered by the Quartz engine in macOS, using traditional and subpixel rendering. Expanded version, with explanations.
OS X/macOS uses subpixel rendering. Version 10.2 introduced subpixel rendering of type and Quartzvector graphics. This feature is enabled using the System Preferences panel 'General' (10.2) or 'Appearance' (10.3), by setting the font smoothing style to 'Medium — best for Flat Panel'. OS X 10.4 introduced an 'Automatic' setting which transparently chooses either 'Medium' or 'Standard,' depending on the type of main display. The quality of the rendering compared to Microsoft's ClearType and FreeType is contested, and is largely a matter of reader preference. However, Apple's approach differs from that of ClearType and FreeType in that TrueType hinting instructions are discarded for all but the smallest type sizes. This results in more consistency of rendering on Mac OS at the expense of allowing type designers a level of fine tuning through hints.
Unicode Fonts For Mac Os X 10 11
Fonts of the original Macintosh[edit]
Approximately 12 fonts were included with the classic Mac OS (versions 1–9). With the sole exception of Bill Atkinson's Venice typeface, the fonts included with the original Macintosh were designed by Susan Kare, who also designed most of the Macintosh's original icons.
The Macintosh was an early example of a mainstream computer using fonts featuring characters of different widths, often referred to as proportional fonts. Previously, most computer systems were limited to using monospaced fonts, requiring, for example, i and m to be exactly the same width. Vector-based fonts had yet to appear in the personal computer arena, at least for screen use, so all the original Mac's typefaces were bitmaps. Fonts were available in multiple sizes; those sizes installed on a system would be displayed in the font menu in an outline style.
From System 1 through Mac OS 7.6, the default system fonts for Mac OS were Chicago for menus and window titles and Geneva for Finder icons, and they could not be customized. The fonts for Finder icons became customizable starting in System 7. It is accessible in the 'Views' control panel. In Mac OS 8 and Mac OS 9, the default system font was changed to Charcoal menus and window titles, but it could be customized in Preferences.
Naming[edit]
After designing the first few fonts, the team decided to adopt a naming convention. First, they settled on using the names of stops along the Paoli, Pennsylvania, commuter rail line: Overbrook, Merion, Ardmore, and Rosemont. Steve Jobs had liked the idea of using cities as the names, but they had to be 'world class' cities.[4]
Variants[edit]
Variants of each font were algorithmically generated on-the-fly from the standard fonts. Bold, italic, outlined, underlined and shadowed variations were the most common, though some applications also included subscript and superscript.
Outline, shadow and underline are not always supported by modern software and fonts.
Apple logo[edit]
Apple's fonts and the Mac OS Romancharacter set include a solid Apple logo. One reason for including a trademark in a font is that the copyright status of fonts and typefaces is a complicated and uncertain matter. Trademark law, on the other hand, is much stronger. Third parties cannot include the Apple logo in fonts without permission from Apple.[citation needed] Apple states in the MacRoman to Unicode mapping file that:
Install Fonts Mac Os X
On regular US QWERTY keyboards, the logo character can be typed using the key combination Shift Option K (⇧⌥K). In MacRoman, the Apple logo has a hex value of 0xF0. The Apple logo has not been assigned a dedicated Unicode code point, but Apple uses U+F8FF () in the Private Use Area.
Note that the logo does have a unique PostScript name in the Adobe Glyph List - /apple, mapping to F8FF.
List[edit]
- Athens (slab serif)
- Cairo was a bitmapdingbat font, most famous for the dogcow at the z character position.
- Chicago (sans-serif) was the default Macintosh system font in System 1–7.6. Also seen on LCD screens of earlier iPod models.
- Geneva (sans-serif) is designed for small point sizes and prevalent in all versions of the Mac user interface. Its name betrays its inspiration by the Swiss typeface Helvetica. Nine point Geneva is built into Old World ROM Macs.
- London (blackletter) was an Old English–style font.
- Los Angeles (script) was a thin font that emulated handwriting.
- Mobile was a bitmapdingbat font. Before System 6, it was known as Taliesin.
- Monaco (sans-serif, monospaced) is a fixed-width font well-suited for 9–12 pt use. Ten point Monaco is built into Old World ROM Macs.
- New York (serif) was a Times Roman–inspired font. The name alluded to the inspiration, even though the Times for which Times Roman was created was that of London, not New York.
- San Francisco was a whimsical font where each character looked as if it was a cutout from a newspaper, creating an intentional ransom note effect.
- Toronto (slab serif) was a geometric design. It was removed from System 6 and later.
- Venice (script) was a calligraphic font designed by Bill Atkinson.
See also[edit]
Fonts For Mac
References[edit]
- ^'Fonts supplied with Mac OS'. Microsoft. 2001-05-29. Retrieved 2008-07-17.
- ^Strizver, Ilene (2015-06-29). 'Hermann Zapf, ITC & Apple: The History of ITC Zapf Chancery & ITC Zapf Dingbats'. CreativePro.com. Retrieved 2017-05-27.
- ^ ab'The TrueType Font File - The Zapf table'. TrueType Reference Manual. Apple Computer, Inc. 2000-09-14. Retrieved 2017-07-25.
- ^'World Class Cities'. Folklore.org. Retrieved 2008-07-17.
Unicode Fonts For Mac Os X
External links[edit]
- 'Mac OS 7.x, 8.x 9.x: Fonts Included With Major System Releases'. Apple Inc. 2002-06-11. Retrieved 2008-07-17.
Free Calligraphy Fonts For Mac
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