‘Liberation Serif’ – GNU+Linux, metrically compatible with Times New Roman.‘Linux Libertine’ – GNU+Linux, alternative to Times New Roman.‘Georgia’ – Windows, intended as a serif typeface that would appear elegant but legible printed small or on low-resolution screens.sans-serif – Platform default: Arial on Windows.‘Helvetica Neue’ – Removed, see “Helvetica Neue cannot render some combining characters correctly”.‘Noto Sans’ – Webfont, extended language support.GNU+Linux, metrically compatible with Arial. ‘Arimo’ – Removed, see “Typography refresh body type renders incorrectly in Windows”, patch.‘Lato’ – designed for a Bank, Wikimedia Design choice, OFL licensed.‘Segoe UI’ – Windows Vista & newer, intended to improve the consistency in how users see all text across all languages.‘BlinkMacSystemFont’ (‘San Francisco’) – Chrome 48+ macOS and iOS.-apple-system (‘San Francisco’) – Safari 9+ macOS and iOS, Firefox macOS.Some fonts are specific to skins, not part of WikimediaBase UI. Serif vs. Sans Serif Fonts: Is One Really Better Than the Other?. How Typography Determines Readability: Serif vs. Sans Serif, and How To Combine Fonts.An alternative method where system fonts are declared using Fixing browsers’ broken monospace font handling.Projects/Improve mobile reading experience.Wikimedia Design Style Guide – Typography.8 Example of non-lining numbers in Georgia font, if Georgia is rendered: 123456789.5 Wikimedia Design Style Guide font selection.4.1 Sans-serif fonts for article (variable 4.2 Serif fonts for heading (variable 4.3 Monospace fonts for code blocks (variable 4.4 Fonts used by various projects and in the past.
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