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Alternate (Glyph)

Alternate (Glyph)

Sponsored by NM type . Typeface in use: Sixten , designed by Noel Pretorius and María Ramos, 2023.

An alternate is a variant shape of a character, which has to be considered as a glyph of its own.

Alternate glyphs are created for various reasons:
• contextual: such as case-sensitive punctuations, where punctuation symbols can be aligned in a nicer way with capital letters when set within them, or tabular figures if they are used in numeric tables;
• positional: in Arabic or other scripts that have connected characters, a character may need to have different shapes depending on its position in a word (initial, medial, final, isolated);
• stylistic: such as single-story or double-story letters a or g. These alternates can also reflect a specific aesthetic choice (e.g., with or without swashes).
• localization: some languages using a same script as others require a different form of the same character as localized preference variant.

In digital fonts, these variants are accessed through OpenType features. Each one is tagged with a specific code (added as an extension to a glyph’s name) that enables a software to apply them whenever needed. Some most used ones being listed below:
• calt : contextual alternates
• case : case-sensitive forms
• ss01, ss02, etc. : stylistic sets
• locl : localized forms
• onum : oldstyle figures
• tnum : tabular figures

Notes

MORE DETAILS

See the complete list in the OpenType Feature Tags specification .

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