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by donald_draper
5062 days ago
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It's not random, they're basically numerals fitting lowercase characters. The idea is to integrate them into text flow. Numerals that are all at the height of upper case would LOOK LIKE THIS IN TEXT ;-) Not sure about Georgia, but most larger fonts have various versions of numerals for tables (where you want them all the same height, and width monospaced width) and for text (as in Georgia). In OpenType print fonts you can select those types of numbers by turning on/off certain 'features' of the font (the glyphs will be exchanged without changing the text itself). That should be possible soon in webfonts too, I think Firefox already supports that, and IE 10 will follow. |
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>they're basically numerals fitting lowercase characters
Nope. I think you may be forgetting what Georgia looks like: http://www.identifont.com/samples/microsoft/Georgia.gif
>Numerals that are all at the height of upper case would LOOK LIKE THIS IN TEXT ;-)
I disagree. Lots of fonts have numerals that are the same size/location as the rest of the text. http://desktoppub.about.com/od/glossary/g/Lining-Figures.htm