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On 3/18/15 11:15 PM, Nathan Andelin wrote:
Not sure what you mean by set-width.

Some typographic terms, that might actually be of interest to some of you:

Point size is the measurement of a font, from the highest ascender down to the lowest descender. In foundry type, Monotype, and wood display type, it is also the measurement of the type body, along that same axis.

Cap height is the measurement from the height of the capital letters (and it's entirely possible for ascenders on lowercase letters to extend beyond the hightest capital) to the baseline.

X-height is the height of the lowercase "x" (and of other lowercase letters that have neither ascenders nor descenders), measured from the baseline.

SET WIDTH is the width of a single character, or of a particular combination of characters and spacing material.

An em-quad (or "molly" or "mutton") is the basic unit of spacing: the set width is the same as the point-size, and in a font that is neither extended nor condensed, it is the width of a lowercase "m" (hence the term).

An en-quad (or "nut") is half an em-quad, and likewise the natural width of a lowercase "n." It's also the most natural word space for type that is set in ALL CAPS.

A 3-em space is a third of an em-quad, and is the most natural word space for type that is set in upper and lower case.

Foundry type spacing material is supplied in fixed increments (from a 3-em quad, a piece 3 ems wide, down to a 5-em space, only a fifth of an em, and a hairspace, even thinner). Ludlow spacing material is in fixed increments from 9 picas down to 1 point. Linotypes have em quads, en quads, "thin" spaces, and spacebands, which are variable in width, and used to justify lines.

A FONT is a collection of glyphs, in a single typeface. In all forms of metal (and wood) type, and in bitmap fonts, it is a single face at a single point size. In digital outline fonts, and certain photographic systems, it is a single face, scalable to any point size within limits.

--
JHHL

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