When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Hungarian forint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hungarian_forint

    The introduction of the forint on 1 August 1946 was a crucial step in the post-World War II stabilisation of the Hungarian economy, and the currency remained relatively stable until the 1980s. Transition to a market economy in the early 1990s adversely affected the value of the forint; inflation peaked at 35% in 1991.

  3. Open-source Unicode typefaces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open-source_Unicode_typefaces

    2018-06-25 / 1.002 Kelvinch Font: OFL, free for any use 2016-04-18 Most Latin blocks fully populated + Cyrillic, Georgian, Armenian & Runes. Comes in Roman, Italic, Bold & Bold Italic. Kurinto Font Folio: OFL: 2020-07-26 / 2.196 Pan-Unicode, 21 typefaces, 506 fonts, coverage of most of Unicode v12.1 plus many auxiliary scripts including the UCSUR.

  4. Coins of the Austro-Hungarian gulden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coins_of_the_Austro...

    8 forint / 20 frank 21 mm "MAGYAR KIRÁLYSÁG", Middle coat of arms, value, year of minting 1870 "MAGYAR KIRÁLYSÁG", Middle coat of arms (including Fiume), value, year of minting 1890 Coins of Hungary – bullion gold coins 1 dukát 19.75 mm "FERENCZ J. A. CSÁSZÁR" 9, standing I Ferenc József, mintmark "MAGYAR ORSZÁG AP.

  5. Traditional point-size names - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditional_point-size_names

    Fonts originally consisted of a set of moveable type letterpunches purchased from a type foundry. As early as 1600, the sizes of these types—their "bodies" [ 1 ] —acquired traditional names in English, French, German, and Dutch, usually from their principal early uses. [ 2 ]

  6. Unicode subscripts and superscripts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode_subscripts_and...

    [5] [a] User-end support was quite poor for a number of years, but fonts, [b] browsers, [c] word processors, [d] desktop publishing software [e] and others increasingly support the intended Unicode behavior. This browser and your default font render it as 3⁄4. (See Slash (punctuation)#Fractions for rendering in various other fonts.)

  7. Unicode font - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode_font

    A Unicode font is a computer font that maps glyphs to code points defined in the Unicode Standard. [1] The vast majority of modern computer fonts use Unicode mappings, even those fonts which only include glyphs for a single writing system , or even only support the basic Latin alphabet .

  8. Fillér - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fillér

    It was the 1 ⁄ 100 subdivision of the Austro-Hungarian and the Hungarian korona, the pengÅ‘, and the forint. The name derives from the German word vier (four). Originally, it was the name of the four-kreuzer coin. The fillér coins introduced in 1946 with the forint were worth 2, 5, 10, 20, and 50 fillér. Due to significant inflation that ...

  9. Computer font - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_font

    A bitmap color font for the Amiga OS. Digital bitmap fonts (and the final rendering of vector fonts) may use monochrome or shades of gray.The latter is anti-aliased.When displaying a text, typically an operating system properly represents the "shades of gray" as intermediate colors between the color of the font and that of the background.