Is there a sans-serif font that appears different for I (capital i) and l (small L)? ...

Maximum summed subsequences with non-adjacent items

Can an alien society believe that their star system is the universe?

Did Krishna say in Bhagavad Gita "I am in every living being"

Did Deadpool rescue all of the X-Force?

Amount of permutations on an NxNxN Rubik's Cube

How fail-safe is nr as stop bytes?

Sum letters are not two different

Time to Settle Down!

How do living politicians protect their readily obtainable signatures from misuse?

Can anything be seen from the center of the Boötes void? How dark would it be?

A term for a woman complaining about things/begging in a cute/childish way

Converted a Scalar function to a TVF function for parallel execution-Still running in Serial mode

Is there hard evidence that the grant peer review system performs significantly better than random?

How to install press fit bottom bracket into new frame

What is the appropriate index architecture when forced to implement IsDeleted (soft deletes)?

Combinatorics problem on counting.

What is the font for "b" letter?

Should I follow up with an employee I believe overracted to a mistake I made?

Illegal assignment from sObject to Id

Is grep documentation about ignoring case wrong, since it doesn't ignore case in filenames?

Localisation of Category

Chebyshev inequality in terms of RMS

Effects on objects due to a brief relocation of massive amounts of mass

When a candle burns, why does the top of wick glow if bottom of flame is hottest?



Is there a sans-serif font that appears different for I (capital i) and l (small L)?



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Installing TTF fonts in LaTeXSans serif font with distinguished capital I for math.Sans font to go with Bitstream CharterSans serif font with distinguished capital I for math.Sans-serif font different in outputUsing two different Sans Serif fonts eliminates bold fontCustom typeface for sans serif in math modeSans-Serif and Monospace font matching Gentium (pdflatex)fontspec – sans-serif as main font?Is there any sans-serif font that fully supports unicode-math?Sans serif font with unicode support in xelatexMontserrat as math sans serif font?Detecting sans-serif font family












32















Is there a sans-serif font that appears different for I and l? If we are not familiar with "Kim Jong Il", we might spell his name as Kim Jong Two or other incorrect ones.










share|improve this question

























  • Most sans-serif fonts have I and l glyphs that look different. Usually, the lowercase l (surprisingly?) is taller than the uppercase I. Separately, the letters may be easy to confuse, but when combined, as in ‘Kim Jong Il’, it’s usually no problem to distinguish them.

    – Karl Ove Hufthammer
    Dec 29 '11 at 9:57






  • 4





    @KarlOveHufthammer: I believe that most people cannot notice that l is taller than I even in "Kim Jong Il" (if it is read at a glance). Thanks anyway.

    – kiss my armpit
    Dec 29 '11 at 10:16













  • Many sans serif fonts have tilted lower part of lower case l, e.g. Canatrell.

    – Khaled Hosny
    Dec 29 '11 at 14:00











  • Relevant: google.com/search?q=sans+serif+font+distinguishable+l+I

    – Andreas
    Dec 12 '12 at 20:36


















32















Is there a sans-serif font that appears different for I and l? If we are not familiar with "Kim Jong Il", we might spell his name as Kim Jong Two or other incorrect ones.










share|improve this question

























  • Most sans-serif fonts have I and l glyphs that look different. Usually, the lowercase l (surprisingly?) is taller than the uppercase I. Separately, the letters may be easy to confuse, but when combined, as in ‘Kim Jong Il’, it’s usually no problem to distinguish them.

    – Karl Ove Hufthammer
    Dec 29 '11 at 9:57






  • 4





    @KarlOveHufthammer: I believe that most people cannot notice that l is taller than I even in "Kim Jong Il" (if it is read at a glance). Thanks anyway.

    – kiss my armpit
    Dec 29 '11 at 10:16













  • Many sans serif fonts have tilted lower part of lower case l, e.g. Canatrell.

    – Khaled Hosny
    Dec 29 '11 at 14:00











  • Relevant: google.com/search?q=sans+serif+font+distinguishable+l+I

    – Andreas
    Dec 12 '12 at 20:36
















32












32








32


5






Is there a sans-serif font that appears different for I and l? If we are not familiar with "Kim Jong Il", we might spell his name as Kim Jong Two or other incorrect ones.










share|improve this question
















Is there a sans-serif font that appears different for I and l? If we are not familiar with "Kim Jong Il", we might spell his name as Kim Jong Two or other incorrect ones.







fonts sans-serif






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 29 '11 at 7:16









lockstep

193k53594723




193k53594723










asked Dec 29 '11 at 6:48









kiss my armpitkiss my armpit

13.5k20176410




13.5k20176410













  • Most sans-serif fonts have I and l glyphs that look different. Usually, the lowercase l (surprisingly?) is taller than the uppercase I. Separately, the letters may be easy to confuse, but when combined, as in ‘Kim Jong Il’, it’s usually no problem to distinguish them.

    – Karl Ove Hufthammer
    Dec 29 '11 at 9:57






  • 4





    @KarlOveHufthammer: I believe that most people cannot notice that l is taller than I even in "Kim Jong Il" (if it is read at a glance). Thanks anyway.

    – kiss my armpit
    Dec 29 '11 at 10:16













  • Many sans serif fonts have tilted lower part of lower case l, e.g. Canatrell.

    – Khaled Hosny
    Dec 29 '11 at 14:00











  • Relevant: google.com/search?q=sans+serif+font+distinguishable+l+I

    – Andreas
    Dec 12 '12 at 20:36





















  • Most sans-serif fonts have I and l glyphs that look different. Usually, the lowercase l (surprisingly?) is taller than the uppercase I. Separately, the letters may be easy to confuse, but when combined, as in ‘Kim Jong Il’, it’s usually no problem to distinguish them.

    – Karl Ove Hufthammer
    Dec 29 '11 at 9:57






  • 4





    @KarlOveHufthammer: I believe that most people cannot notice that l is taller than I even in "Kim Jong Il" (if it is read at a glance). Thanks anyway.

    – kiss my armpit
    Dec 29 '11 at 10:16













  • Many sans serif fonts have tilted lower part of lower case l, e.g. Canatrell.

    – Khaled Hosny
    Dec 29 '11 at 14:00











  • Relevant: google.com/search?q=sans+serif+font+distinguishable+l+I

    – Andreas
    Dec 12 '12 at 20:36



















Most sans-serif fonts have I and l glyphs that look different. Usually, the lowercase l (surprisingly?) is taller than the uppercase I. Separately, the letters may be easy to confuse, but when combined, as in ‘Kim Jong Il’, it’s usually no problem to distinguish them.

– Karl Ove Hufthammer
Dec 29 '11 at 9:57





Most sans-serif fonts have I and l glyphs that look different. Usually, the lowercase l (surprisingly?) is taller than the uppercase I. Separately, the letters may be easy to confuse, but when combined, as in ‘Kim Jong Il’, it’s usually no problem to distinguish them.

– Karl Ove Hufthammer
Dec 29 '11 at 9:57




4




4





@KarlOveHufthammer: I believe that most people cannot notice that l is taller than I even in "Kim Jong Il" (if it is read at a glance). Thanks anyway.

– kiss my armpit
Dec 29 '11 at 10:16







@KarlOveHufthammer: I believe that most people cannot notice that l is taller than I even in "Kim Jong Il" (if it is read at a glance). Thanks anyway.

– kiss my armpit
Dec 29 '11 at 10:16















Many sans serif fonts have tilted lower part of lower case l, e.g. Canatrell.

– Khaled Hosny
Dec 29 '11 at 14:00





Many sans serif fonts have tilted lower part of lower case l, e.g. Canatrell.

– Khaled Hosny
Dec 29 '11 at 14:00













Relevant: google.com/search?q=sans+serif+font+distinguishable+l+I

– Andreas
Dec 12 '12 at 20:36







Relevant: google.com/search?q=sans+serif+font+distinguishable+l+I

– Andreas
Dec 12 '12 at 20:36












10 Answers
10






active

oldest

votes


















20














From the LaTeX2e Font Catalogue: Sans Serif Fonts, there is venturis:



enter image description here



documentclass{article}
usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
usepackage[lf]{venturis} %% lf option gives lining figures as default;
%% remove option to get oldstyle figures as default
renewcommand*familydefault{sfdefault} %% Only if the base font of the document is to be sans serif
begin{document}
Kim Jong Il
end{document}





share|improve this answer



















  • 24





    Not sure I would call this sans-serif. Maybe peu de serif.

    – Andreas
    Dec 12 '12 at 20:36



















26





+50









Some examples for fonts in T1 font-encoding



Found in a full MiKTeX installation, but also in my (portable) TeX Live installation:



font test result: fonts with good distinction between I and l



documentclass[12pt]{article}

usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
usepackage[english]{babel}
usepackage{lmodern}

newcommand*{test}{W. H. Gates III. | Ill Bill}
newcommand*{testfont}[2]{#1: textsf{fontfamily{#2}selectfonttest}}

setlength{parindent}{0pt}
linespread{1.5}

begin{document}

testfont{Cabin}{Cabin-TLF}

testfont{Cantarell}{fca}

testfont{Comfortaa}{fco}

testfont{Iwona}{iwona}

testfont{Kp-Sans}{jkpss}

testfont{PT-Sans}{PTSans-TLF}

- * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * -

testfont{Tahoma}{tahoma}

testfont{MS Trebuchet}{trebuchet}

testfont{Verdana}{verdana}

end{document}


If used alone or with their family companions, most of them are called with a usepackage command. For the three fonts below the starred line one needs to manually install the winfonts package.





Just for comparison some fonts with no or only a little distinction between big i and small L:



font test result: fonts with no or slight distinction between I and l






share|improve this answer

































    6














    The lack of distinction between the uppercase "i" and the lowercase "L" in many sans-serif fonts bothers me.



    It's a legibility issue.



    To help mitigate this issue, I am maintaining a simple list of sans-serif fonts which do not have this distinction problem, or at least less of this problem.



    Maybe I am obsessing over something silly, but here it is:



    http://www.crossbarifonts.info/






    share|improve this answer

































      5














      What about the new Source Sans Pro by Adobe?
      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer
























      • Yes, I’ve forgotten (but I wrote “examples”).

        – Speravir
        Dec 13 '12 at 16:33



















      4














      A true sans-serif font might opt to add a finial to the lower case L, such as
      http://www.fonts101.com/search/din+mittel



      DIN 1451 Mittelschrift example



      With the usual caveat involved in using truetype fonts in LaTeX.






      share|improve this answer


























      • Relevant: s3images.coroflot.com/user_files/individual_files/…

        – Andreas
        Dec 12 '12 at 21:02



















      3














      Besides choosing fonts to be used in the document itself, it is also helpful to have a good font for doing the editing work. There it is equally helpful to be able to distinguish characters like o O 0 Q and l I | easily. My recommendation is neither free nor cheap but after switching editing fonts for some time I have setteled with PragmataPro.






      share|improve this answer































        2














        I like Tahoma and Verdana because they have serifs on the capital I, but the rest of the characters are sans-serif.






        share|improve this answer































          2














          Another fine choice is the Raleway font, which is available in a recent TeXlive via usepackage{raleway}. It is interoperable with pdftex, but also with the new Unicode engines xetex and luatex.



          documentclass{article}
          usepackage{raleway}
          begin{document}
          sffamily
          W. H. Gates III. | Ill Bill
          end{document}



          enter image description here







          share|improve this answer































            2














            Not in TeX Live (not yet, at least), but if you’re using xetex or luatex, here’s an option: IBM has just released a beta version of its new corporate type family, IBM Plex, containing unambiguous sans as well as monospace and serif fonts, all with real italics and in eight weights. The family is open source and available at github.com/IBM/plex.



            documentclass{article}
            usepackage{fontspec}
            setmainfont{IBMPlexSans-Regular.otf}
            begin{document}
            Kim Jong Il
            end{document}


            output



            Another unambiguous sans is Archia, of which the regular weight is available free with a tweet or a Facebook share (the whole family of six upright weights has a “pay what you want” pricing policy).



            sample of Archia



            (There are more samples on Behance.)



            Don’t overlook the Go fonts by Bigelow & Holmes, which are available in TeX Live. As Chuck Bigelow explains in his notes (texmf-dist/doc/fonts/gofonts/gofonts.pdf), this family conforms to the German DIN 1450 legibility standard, nicely described by Linotype.



            sample of Go



            Also noteworthy is Luciole, which is designed for readers with impaired vision. Its regular, italic, bold, and bold italic are free:



            sample of Luciole



            Update: Thanks to Bob Tennent, CTAN now has a package supporting IBM Plex for LaTeX and pdfLaTeX as well as XeLaTeX and LuaLaTeX.






            share|improve this answer

































              0














              Segoe UI works as well. I don't know if this font is commonly available. I think it's what my Outlook uses for the calendar, folders, etc.






              share|improve this answer


























                Your Answer








                StackExchange.ready(function() {
                var channelOptions = {
                tags: "".split(" "),
                id: "85"
                };
                initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

                StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
                // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
                if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
                StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
                createEditor();
                });
                }
                else {
                createEditor();
                }
                });

                function createEditor() {
                StackExchange.prepareEditor({
                heartbeatType: 'answer',
                autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
                convertImagesToLinks: false,
                noModals: true,
                showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
                reputationToPostImages: null,
                bindNavPrevention: true,
                postfix: "",
                imageUploader: {
                brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
                contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
                allowUrls: true
                },
                onDemand: true,
                discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
                ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
                });


                }
                });














                draft saved

                draft discarded


















                StackExchange.ready(
                function () {
                StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f39543%2fis-there-a-sans-serif-font-that-appears-different-for-i-capital-i-and-l-small%23new-answer', 'question_page');
                }
                );

                Post as a guest















                Required, but never shown

























                10 Answers
                10






                active

                oldest

                votes








                10 Answers
                10






                active

                oldest

                votes









                active

                oldest

                votes






                active

                oldest

                votes









                20














                From the LaTeX2e Font Catalogue: Sans Serif Fonts, there is venturis:



                enter image description here



                documentclass{article}
                usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
                usepackage[lf]{venturis} %% lf option gives lining figures as default;
                %% remove option to get oldstyle figures as default
                renewcommand*familydefault{sfdefault} %% Only if the base font of the document is to be sans serif
                begin{document}
                Kim Jong Il
                end{document}





                share|improve this answer



















                • 24





                  Not sure I would call this sans-serif. Maybe peu de serif.

                  – Andreas
                  Dec 12 '12 at 20:36
















                20














                From the LaTeX2e Font Catalogue: Sans Serif Fonts, there is venturis:



                enter image description here



                documentclass{article}
                usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
                usepackage[lf]{venturis} %% lf option gives lining figures as default;
                %% remove option to get oldstyle figures as default
                renewcommand*familydefault{sfdefault} %% Only if the base font of the document is to be sans serif
                begin{document}
                Kim Jong Il
                end{document}





                share|improve this answer



















                • 24





                  Not sure I would call this sans-serif. Maybe peu de serif.

                  – Andreas
                  Dec 12 '12 at 20:36














                20












                20








                20







                From the LaTeX2e Font Catalogue: Sans Serif Fonts, there is venturis:



                enter image description here



                documentclass{article}
                usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
                usepackage[lf]{venturis} %% lf option gives lining figures as default;
                %% remove option to get oldstyle figures as default
                renewcommand*familydefault{sfdefault} %% Only if the base font of the document is to be sans serif
                begin{document}
                Kim Jong Il
                end{document}





                share|improve this answer













                From the LaTeX2e Font Catalogue: Sans Serif Fonts, there is venturis:



                enter image description here



                documentclass{article}
                usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
                usepackage[lf]{venturis} %% lf option gives lining figures as default;
                %% remove option to get oldstyle figures as default
                renewcommand*familydefault{sfdefault} %% Only if the base font of the document is to be sans serif
                begin{document}
                Kim Jong Il
                end{document}






                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Dec 29 '11 at 6:58









                WernerWerner

                451k7210001713




                451k7210001713








                • 24





                  Not sure I would call this sans-serif. Maybe peu de serif.

                  – Andreas
                  Dec 12 '12 at 20:36














                • 24





                  Not sure I would call this sans-serif. Maybe peu de serif.

                  – Andreas
                  Dec 12 '12 at 20:36








                24




                24





                Not sure I would call this sans-serif. Maybe peu de serif.

                – Andreas
                Dec 12 '12 at 20:36





                Not sure I would call this sans-serif. Maybe peu de serif.

                – Andreas
                Dec 12 '12 at 20:36











                26





                +50









                Some examples for fonts in T1 font-encoding



                Found in a full MiKTeX installation, but also in my (portable) TeX Live installation:



                font test result: fonts with good distinction between I and l



                documentclass[12pt]{article}

                usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
                usepackage[english]{babel}
                usepackage{lmodern}

                newcommand*{test}{W. H. Gates III. | Ill Bill}
                newcommand*{testfont}[2]{#1: textsf{fontfamily{#2}selectfonttest}}

                setlength{parindent}{0pt}
                linespread{1.5}

                begin{document}

                testfont{Cabin}{Cabin-TLF}

                testfont{Cantarell}{fca}

                testfont{Comfortaa}{fco}

                testfont{Iwona}{iwona}

                testfont{Kp-Sans}{jkpss}

                testfont{PT-Sans}{PTSans-TLF}

                - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * -

                testfont{Tahoma}{tahoma}

                testfont{MS Trebuchet}{trebuchet}

                testfont{Verdana}{verdana}

                end{document}


                If used alone or with their family companions, most of them are called with a usepackage command. For the three fonts below the starred line one needs to manually install the winfonts package.





                Just for comparison some fonts with no or only a little distinction between big i and small L:



                font test result: fonts with no or slight distinction between I and l






                share|improve this answer






























                  26





                  +50









                  Some examples for fonts in T1 font-encoding



                  Found in a full MiKTeX installation, but also in my (portable) TeX Live installation:



                  font test result: fonts with good distinction between I and l



                  documentclass[12pt]{article}

                  usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
                  usepackage[english]{babel}
                  usepackage{lmodern}

                  newcommand*{test}{W. H. Gates III. | Ill Bill}
                  newcommand*{testfont}[2]{#1: textsf{fontfamily{#2}selectfonttest}}

                  setlength{parindent}{0pt}
                  linespread{1.5}

                  begin{document}

                  testfont{Cabin}{Cabin-TLF}

                  testfont{Cantarell}{fca}

                  testfont{Comfortaa}{fco}

                  testfont{Iwona}{iwona}

                  testfont{Kp-Sans}{jkpss}

                  testfont{PT-Sans}{PTSans-TLF}

                  - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * -

                  testfont{Tahoma}{tahoma}

                  testfont{MS Trebuchet}{trebuchet}

                  testfont{Verdana}{verdana}

                  end{document}


                  If used alone or with their family companions, most of them are called with a usepackage command. For the three fonts below the starred line one needs to manually install the winfonts package.





                  Just for comparison some fonts with no or only a little distinction between big i and small L:



                  font test result: fonts with no or slight distinction between I and l






                  share|improve this answer




























                    26





                    +50







                    26





                    +50



                    26




                    +50





                    Some examples for fonts in T1 font-encoding



                    Found in a full MiKTeX installation, but also in my (portable) TeX Live installation:



                    font test result: fonts with good distinction between I and l



                    documentclass[12pt]{article}

                    usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
                    usepackage[english]{babel}
                    usepackage{lmodern}

                    newcommand*{test}{W. H. Gates III. | Ill Bill}
                    newcommand*{testfont}[2]{#1: textsf{fontfamily{#2}selectfonttest}}

                    setlength{parindent}{0pt}
                    linespread{1.5}

                    begin{document}

                    testfont{Cabin}{Cabin-TLF}

                    testfont{Cantarell}{fca}

                    testfont{Comfortaa}{fco}

                    testfont{Iwona}{iwona}

                    testfont{Kp-Sans}{jkpss}

                    testfont{PT-Sans}{PTSans-TLF}

                    - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * -

                    testfont{Tahoma}{tahoma}

                    testfont{MS Trebuchet}{trebuchet}

                    testfont{Verdana}{verdana}

                    end{document}


                    If used alone or with their family companions, most of them are called with a usepackage command. For the three fonts below the starred line one needs to manually install the winfonts package.





                    Just for comparison some fonts with no or only a little distinction between big i and small L:



                    font test result: fonts with no or slight distinction between I and l






                    share|improve this answer















                    Some examples for fonts in T1 font-encoding



                    Found in a full MiKTeX installation, but also in my (portable) TeX Live installation:



                    font test result: fonts with good distinction between I and l



                    documentclass[12pt]{article}

                    usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
                    usepackage[english]{babel}
                    usepackage{lmodern}

                    newcommand*{test}{W. H. Gates III. | Ill Bill}
                    newcommand*{testfont}[2]{#1: textsf{fontfamily{#2}selectfonttest}}

                    setlength{parindent}{0pt}
                    linespread{1.5}

                    begin{document}

                    testfont{Cabin}{Cabin-TLF}

                    testfont{Cantarell}{fca}

                    testfont{Comfortaa}{fco}

                    testfont{Iwona}{iwona}

                    testfont{Kp-Sans}{jkpss}

                    testfont{PT-Sans}{PTSans-TLF}

                    - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * - * -

                    testfont{Tahoma}{tahoma}

                    testfont{MS Trebuchet}{trebuchet}

                    testfont{Verdana}{verdana}

                    end{document}


                    If used alone or with their family companions, most of them are called with a usepackage command. For the three fonts below the starred line one needs to manually install the winfonts package.





                    Just for comparison some fonts with no or only a little distinction between big i and small L:



                    font test result: fonts with no or slight distinction between I and l







                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited Dec 13 '12 at 17:33

























                    answered Dec 13 '12 at 0:04









                    SperavirSperavir

                    14.5k1161120




                    14.5k1161120























                        6














                        The lack of distinction between the uppercase "i" and the lowercase "L" in many sans-serif fonts bothers me.



                        It's a legibility issue.



                        To help mitigate this issue, I am maintaining a simple list of sans-serif fonts which do not have this distinction problem, or at least less of this problem.



                        Maybe I am obsessing over something silly, but here it is:



                        http://www.crossbarifonts.info/






                        share|improve this answer






























                          6














                          The lack of distinction between the uppercase "i" and the lowercase "L" in many sans-serif fonts bothers me.



                          It's a legibility issue.



                          To help mitigate this issue, I am maintaining a simple list of sans-serif fonts which do not have this distinction problem, or at least less of this problem.



                          Maybe I am obsessing over something silly, but here it is:



                          http://www.crossbarifonts.info/






                          share|improve this answer




























                            6












                            6








                            6







                            The lack of distinction between the uppercase "i" and the lowercase "L" in many sans-serif fonts bothers me.



                            It's a legibility issue.



                            To help mitigate this issue, I am maintaining a simple list of sans-serif fonts which do not have this distinction problem, or at least less of this problem.



                            Maybe I am obsessing over something silly, but here it is:



                            http://www.crossbarifonts.info/






                            share|improve this answer















                            The lack of distinction between the uppercase "i" and the lowercase "L" in many sans-serif fonts bothers me.



                            It's a legibility issue.



                            To help mitigate this issue, I am maintaining a simple list of sans-serif fonts which do not have this distinction problem, or at least less of this problem.



                            Maybe I am obsessing over something silly, but here it is:



                            http://www.crossbarifonts.info/







                            share|improve this answer














                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer








                            edited Mar 12 '17 at 3:52









                            CarLaTeX

                            34.8k552144




                            34.8k552144










                            answered Mar 12 '17 at 3:42









                            isralCDukeisralCDuke

                            6112




                            6112























                                5














                                What about the new Source Sans Pro by Adobe?
                                enter image description here






                                share|improve this answer
























                                • Yes, I’ve forgotten (but I wrote “examples”).

                                  – Speravir
                                  Dec 13 '12 at 16:33
















                                5














                                What about the new Source Sans Pro by Adobe?
                                enter image description here






                                share|improve this answer
























                                • Yes, I’ve forgotten (but I wrote “examples”).

                                  – Speravir
                                  Dec 13 '12 at 16:33














                                5












                                5








                                5







                                What about the new Source Sans Pro by Adobe?
                                enter image description here






                                share|improve this answer













                                What about the new Source Sans Pro by Adobe?
                                enter image description here







                                share|improve this answer












                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer










                                answered Dec 13 '12 at 9:59









                                Keks DoseKeks Dose

                                21.5k35696




                                21.5k35696













                                • Yes, I’ve forgotten (but I wrote “examples”).

                                  – Speravir
                                  Dec 13 '12 at 16:33



















                                • Yes, I’ve forgotten (but I wrote “examples”).

                                  – Speravir
                                  Dec 13 '12 at 16:33

















                                Yes, I’ve forgotten (but I wrote “examples”).

                                – Speravir
                                Dec 13 '12 at 16:33





                                Yes, I’ve forgotten (but I wrote “examples”).

                                – Speravir
                                Dec 13 '12 at 16:33











                                4














                                A true sans-serif font might opt to add a finial to the lower case L, such as
                                http://www.fonts101.com/search/din+mittel



                                DIN 1451 Mittelschrift example



                                With the usual caveat involved in using truetype fonts in LaTeX.






                                share|improve this answer


























                                • Relevant: s3images.coroflot.com/user_files/individual_files/…

                                  – Andreas
                                  Dec 12 '12 at 21:02
















                                4














                                A true sans-serif font might opt to add a finial to the lower case L, such as
                                http://www.fonts101.com/search/din+mittel



                                DIN 1451 Mittelschrift example



                                With the usual caveat involved in using truetype fonts in LaTeX.






                                share|improve this answer


























                                • Relevant: s3images.coroflot.com/user_files/individual_files/…

                                  – Andreas
                                  Dec 12 '12 at 21:02














                                4












                                4








                                4







                                A true sans-serif font might opt to add a finial to the lower case L, such as
                                http://www.fonts101.com/search/din+mittel



                                DIN 1451 Mittelschrift example



                                With the usual caveat involved in using truetype fonts in LaTeX.






                                share|improve this answer















                                A true sans-serif font might opt to add a finial to the lower case L, such as
                                http://www.fonts101.com/search/din+mittel



                                DIN 1451 Mittelschrift example



                                With the usual caveat involved in using truetype fonts in LaTeX.







                                share|improve this answer














                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer








                                edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:35









                                Community

                                1




                                1










                                answered Dec 12 '12 at 20:40









                                AndreasAndreas

                                814512




                                814512













                                • Relevant: s3images.coroflot.com/user_files/individual_files/…

                                  – Andreas
                                  Dec 12 '12 at 21:02



















                                • Relevant: s3images.coroflot.com/user_files/individual_files/…

                                  – Andreas
                                  Dec 12 '12 at 21:02

















                                Relevant: s3images.coroflot.com/user_files/individual_files/…

                                – Andreas
                                Dec 12 '12 at 21:02





                                Relevant: s3images.coroflot.com/user_files/individual_files/…

                                – Andreas
                                Dec 12 '12 at 21:02











                                3














                                Besides choosing fonts to be used in the document itself, it is also helpful to have a good font for doing the editing work. There it is equally helpful to be able to distinguish characters like o O 0 Q and l I | easily. My recommendation is neither free nor cheap but after switching editing fonts for some time I have setteled with PragmataPro.






                                share|improve this answer




























                                  3














                                  Besides choosing fonts to be used in the document itself, it is also helpful to have a good font for doing the editing work. There it is equally helpful to be able to distinguish characters like o O 0 Q and l I | easily. My recommendation is neither free nor cheap but after switching editing fonts for some time I have setteled with PragmataPro.






                                  share|improve this answer


























                                    3












                                    3








                                    3







                                    Besides choosing fonts to be used in the document itself, it is also helpful to have a good font for doing the editing work. There it is equally helpful to be able to distinguish characters like o O 0 Q and l I | easily. My recommendation is neither free nor cheap but after switching editing fonts for some time I have setteled with PragmataPro.






                                    share|improve this answer













                                    Besides choosing fonts to be used in the document itself, it is also helpful to have a good font for doing the editing work. There it is equally helpful to be able to distinguish characters like o O 0 Q and l I | easily. My recommendation is neither free nor cheap but after switching editing fonts for some time I have setteled with PragmataPro.







                                    share|improve this answer












                                    share|improve this answer



                                    share|improve this answer










                                    answered Dec 29 '11 at 8:58









                                    uliuli

                                    2,98511533




                                    2,98511533























                                        2














                                        I like Tahoma and Verdana because they have serifs on the capital I, but the rest of the characters are sans-serif.






                                        share|improve this answer




























                                          2














                                          I like Tahoma and Verdana because they have serifs on the capital I, but the rest of the characters are sans-serif.






                                          share|improve this answer


























                                            2












                                            2








                                            2







                                            I like Tahoma and Verdana because they have serifs on the capital I, but the rest of the characters are sans-serif.






                                            share|improve this answer













                                            I like Tahoma and Verdana because they have serifs on the capital I, but the rest of the characters are sans-serif.







                                            share|improve this answer












                                            share|improve this answer



                                            share|improve this answer










                                            answered Jun 17 '15 at 22:07









                                            wisbuckywisbucky

                                            1291




                                            1291























                                                2














                                                Another fine choice is the Raleway font, which is available in a recent TeXlive via usepackage{raleway}. It is interoperable with pdftex, but also with the new Unicode engines xetex and luatex.



                                                documentclass{article}
                                                usepackage{raleway}
                                                begin{document}
                                                sffamily
                                                W. H. Gates III. | Ill Bill
                                                end{document}



                                                enter image description here







                                                share|improve this answer




























                                                  2














                                                  Another fine choice is the Raleway font, which is available in a recent TeXlive via usepackage{raleway}. It is interoperable with pdftex, but also with the new Unicode engines xetex and luatex.



                                                  documentclass{article}
                                                  usepackage{raleway}
                                                  begin{document}
                                                  sffamily
                                                  W. H. Gates III. | Ill Bill
                                                  end{document}



                                                  enter image description here







                                                  share|improve this answer


























                                                    2












                                                    2








                                                    2







                                                    Another fine choice is the Raleway font, which is available in a recent TeXlive via usepackage{raleway}. It is interoperable with pdftex, but also with the new Unicode engines xetex and luatex.



                                                    documentclass{article}
                                                    usepackage{raleway}
                                                    begin{document}
                                                    sffamily
                                                    W. H. Gates III. | Ill Bill
                                                    end{document}



                                                    enter image description here







                                                    share|improve this answer













                                                    Another fine choice is the Raleway font, which is available in a recent TeXlive via usepackage{raleway}. It is interoperable with pdftex, but also with the new Unicode engines xetex and luatex.



                                                    documentclass{article}
                                                    usepackage{raleway}
                                                    begin{document}
                                                    sffamily
                                                    W. H. Gates III. | Ill Bill
                                                    end{document}



                                                    enter image description here








                                                    share|improve this answer












                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                    share|improve this answer










                                                    answered Jul 13 '15 at 19:11









                                                    Henri MenkeHenri Menke

                                                    77.6k8171285




                                                    77.6k8171285























                                                        2














                                                        Not in TeX Live (not yet, at least), but if you’re using xetex or luatex, here’s an option: IBM has just released a beta version of its new corporate type family, IBM Plex, containing unambiguous sans as well as monospace and serif fonts, all with real italics and in eight weights. The family is open source and available at github.com/IBM/plex.



                                                        documentclass{article}
                                                        usepackage{fontspec}
                                                        setmainfont{IBMPlexSans-Regular.otf}
                                                        begin{document}
                                                        Kim Jong Il
                                                        end{document}


                                                        output



                                                        Another unambiguous sans is Archia, of which the regular weight is available free with a tweet or a Facebook share (the whole family of six upright weights has a “pay what you want” pricing policy).



                                                        sample of Archia



                                                        (There are more samples on Behance.)



                                                        Don’t overlook the Go fonts by Bigelow & Holmes, which are available in TeX Live. As Chuck Bigelow explains in his notes (texmf-dist/doc/fonts/gofonts/gofonts.pdf), this family conforms to the German DIN 1450 legibility standard, nicely described by Linotype.



                                                        sample of Go



                                                        Also noteworthy is Luciole, which is designed for readers with impaired vision. Its regular, italic, bold, and bold italic are free:



                                                        sample of Luciole



                                                        Update: Thanks to Bob Tennent, CTAN now has a package supporting IBM Plex for LaTeX and pdfLaTeX as well as XeLaTeX and LuaLaTeX.






                                                        share|improve this answer






























                                                          2














                                                          Not in TeX Live (not yet, at least), but if you’re using xetex or luatex, here’s an option: IBM has just released a beta version of its new corporate type family, IBM Plex, containing unambiguous sans as well as monospace and serif fonts, all with real italics and in eight weights. The family is open source and available at github.com/IBM/plex.



                                                          documentclass{article}
                                                          usepackage{fontspec}
                                                          setmainfont{IBMPlexSans-Regular.otf}
                                                          begin{document}
                                                          Kim Jong Il
                                                          end{document}


                                                          output



                                                          Another unambiguous sans is Archia, of which the regular weight is available free with a tweet or a Facebook share (the whole family of six upright weights has a “pay what you want” pricing policy).



                                                          sample of Archia



                                                          (There are more samples on Behance.)



                                                          Don’t overlook the Go fonts by Bigelow & Holmes, which are available in TeX Live. As Chuck Bigelow explains in his notes (texmf-dist/doc/fonts/gofonts/gofonts.pdf), this family conforms to the German DIN 1450 legibility standard, nicely described by Linotype.



                                                          sample of Go



                                                          Also noteworthy is Luciole, which is designed for readers with impaired vision. Its regular, italic, bold, and bold italic are free:



                                                          sample of Luciole



                                                          Update: Thanks to Bob Tennent, CTAN now has a package supporting IBM Plex for LaTeX and pdfLaTeX as well as XeLaTeX and LuaLaTeX.






                                                          share|improve this answer




























                                                            2












                                                            2








                                                            2







                                                            Not in TeX Live (not yet, at least), but if you’re using xetex or luatex, here’s an option: IBM has just released a beta version of its new corporate type family, IBM Plex, containing unambiguous sans as well as monospace and serif fonts, all with real italics and in eight weights. The family is open source and available at github.com/IBM/plex.



                                                            documentclass{article}
                                                            usepackage{fontspec}
                                                            setmainfont{IBMPlexSans-Regular.otf}
                                                            begin{document}
                                                            Kim Jong Il
                                                            end{document}


                                                            output



                                                            Another unambiguous sans is Archia, of which the regular weight is available free with a tweet or a Facebook share (the whole family of six upright weights has a “pay what you want” pricing policy).



                                                            sample of Archia



                                                            (There are more samples on Behance.)



                                                            Don’t overlook the Go fonts by Bigelow & Holmes, which are available in TeX Live. As Chuck Bigelow explains in his notes (texmf-dist/doc/fonts/gofonts/gofonts.pdf), this family conforms to the German DIN 1450 legibility standard, nicely described by Linotype.



                                                            sample of Go



                                                            Also noteworthy is Luciole, which is designed for readers with impaired vision. Its regular, italic, bold, and bold italic are free:



                                                            sample of Luciole



                                                            Update: Thanks to Bob Tennent, CTAN now has a package supporting IBM Plex for LaTeX and pdfLaTeX as well as XeLaTeX and LuaLaTeX.






                                                            share|improve this answer















                                                            Not in TeX Live (not yet, at least), but if you’re using xetex or luatex, here’s an option: IBM has just released a beta version of its new corporate type family, IBM Plex, containing unambiguous sans as well as monospace and serif fonts, all with real italics and in eight weights. The family is open source and available at github.com/IBM/plex.



                                                            documentclass{article}
                                                            usepackage{fontspec}
                                                            setmainfont{IBMPlexSans-Regular.otf}
                                                            begin{document}
                                                            Kim Jong Il
                                                            end{document}


                                                            output



                                                            Another unambiguous sans is Archia, of which the regular weight is available free with a tweet or a Facebook share (the whole family of six upright weights has a “pay what you want” pricing policy).



                                                            sample of Archia



                                                            (There are more samples on Behance.)



                                                            Don’t overlook the Go fonts by Bigelow & Holmes, which are available in TeX Live. As Chuck Bigelow explains in his notes (texmf-dist/doc/fonts/gofonts/gofonts.pdf), this family conforms to the German DIN 1450 legibility standard, nicely described by Linotype.



                                                            sample of Go



                                                            Also noteworthy is Luciole, which is designed for readers with impaired vision. Its regular, italic, bold, and bold italic are free:



                                                            sample of Luciole



                                                            Update: Thanks to Bob Tennent, CTAN now has a package supporting IBM Plex for LaTeX and pdfLaTeX as well as XeLaTeX and LuaLaTeX.







                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                            share|improve this answer








                                                            edited 3 mins ago

























                                                            answered Nov 10 '17 at 19:29









                                                            ThérèseThérèse

                                                            9,68732343




                                                            9,68732343























                                                                0














                                                                Segoe UI works as well. I don't know if this font is commonly available. I think it's what my Outlook uses for the calendar, folders, etc.






                                                                share|improve this answer






























                                                                  0














                                                                  Segoe UI works as well. I don't know if this font is commonly available. I think it's what my Outlook uses for the calendar, folders, etc.






                                                                  share|improve this answer




























                                                                    0












                                                                    0








                                                                    0







                                                                    Segoe UI works as well. I don't know if this font is commonly available. I think it's what my Outlook uses for the calendar, folders, etc.






                                                                    share|improve this answer















                                                                    Segoe UI works as well. I don't know if this font is commonly available. I think it's what my Outlook uses for the calendar, folders, etc.







                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                                    edited Feb 24 '16 at 21:05









                                                                    MickG

                                                                    2,65322047




                                                                    2,65322047










                                                                    answered Feb 24 '16 at 20:41









                                                                    CrowCrow

                                                                    1




                                                                    1






























                                                                        draft saved

                                                                        draft discarded




















































                                                                        Thanks for contributing an answer to TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange!


                                                                        • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                                                                        But avoid



                                                                        • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                                                                        • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


                                                                        To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                                                                        draft saved


                                                                        draft discarded














                                                                        StackExchange.ready(
                                                                        function () {
                                                                        StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f39543%2fis-there-a-sans-serif-font-that-appears-different-for-i-capital-i-and-l-small%23new-answer', 'question_page');
                                                                        }
                                                                        );

                                                                        Post as a guest















                                                                        Required, but never shown





















































                                                                        Required, but never shown














                                                                        Required, but never shown












                                                                        Required, but never shown







                                                                        Required, but never shown

































                                                                        Required, but never shown














                                                                        Required, but never shown












                                                                        Required, but never shown







                                                                        Required, but never shown







                                                                        Popular posts from this blog

                                                                        Installing LyX: “No textclass is found.”LyX installation error- text class not found- 'Reconfigure' or...

                                                                        (1602) Indiana Índice Designación y nombre Características orbitales Véase...

                                                                        Universidad Autónoma de Occidente Índice Historia Campus Facultades Programas Académicos Medios de...