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  2. Monospaced font - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monospaced_font

    A monospaced font, also called a fixed-pitch, fixed-width, or non-proportional font, is a font whose letters and characters each occupy the same amount of horizontal space. [ 1 ] [ a ] This contrasts with variable-width fonts , where the letters and spacings have different widths.

  3. Non-breaking space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-breaking_space

    In word processing and digital typesetting, a non-breaking space ( ), also called NBSP, required space, [1] hard space, or fixed space (in most typefaces, it is not of fixed width), is a space character that prevents an automatic line break at its position.

  4. Duospaced font - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duospaced_font

    A duospaced font (also called a duospace font) is a fixed-width font whose letters and characters occupy either of two integer multiples of a specified, fixed horizontal space. Traditionally, this means either a single or double character width, [ 1 ] although the term has also been applied to fonts using fixed character widths with another ...

  5. Fixedsys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixedsys

    The name means fixed system, because its glyphs are monospace or fixed-width (although bolded characters are wider than non-bolded, unlike other monospace fonts such as Courier). It is the oldest font in Microsoft Windows , and was the system font in Windows 1.0 and 2.0 , where it was simply named "System".

  6. Fixed (typeface) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fixed_(typeface)

    -Misc-Fixed-Medium-R-Normal-ko-18-120-100-100-C-180-ISO10646-1 The "6x13" font is usually also available under the alias "fixed", a font name that is expected to be available on every X server. The fonts originally covered only the ASCII repertoire, and were in the early 1990s extended to cover all characters in ISO 8859-1 .

  7. Character encoding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Character_encoding

    An abstract character repertoire (ACR) is the full set of abstract characters that a system supports. Unicode has an open repertoire, meaning that new characters will be added to the repertoire over time. A coded character set (CCS) is a function that maps characters to code points (each code point represents one character). For example, in a ...

  8. UTF-16 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTF-16

    A "character" may use any number of Unicode code points. [20] For instance an emoji flag character takes 8 bytes, since it is "constructed from a pair of Unicode scalar values" [21] (and those values are outside the BMP and require 4 bytes each). UTF-16 in no way assists in "counting characters" or in "measuring the width of a string".

  9. Static character - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/?title=Static_character&redirect=no

    Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; Static character