As much as I appreciate the tiny serif for lowercase L and numeral 1 to differentiate l I and 1, I am not the biggest fan of the capital I glyph without the horizontal serifs. It's my biggest design gripe with most sans-serif fonts as it makes it FRUSTRATINGLY difficult to differentiate when looking at words by themselves.
Is that lota or Iota? Is that iodestone or lodestone? Both real examples where I fumbled reading them -- once in front of a class :)
This is why my favorite sans-serif typeface has been (and will always be) IBM Plex Sans [1]. It's an open font [2]. I have all my laptops and desktops set to using the IBM Plex typefaces, including browser overrides. If only there were a way to do it system-wide on my Android phone...
[1]: https://www.ibm.com/plex/
[2]: https://github.com/IBM/plex/blob/master/LICENSE.txt
Preview: https://fonts.google.com/specimen/IBM+Plex+Sans?preview.text...
Marissa Mayer on why Google chose sans-serif fonts for search results:
When I had to make a decision about should the Google results pages be serif or sans-serif, I didn't have enough users to do the split A/B testing and mathematically figure that out, so I ended up reading a lot of research and ultimately finding out that serif fonts are more readable, and sans-serif fonts are more legible.
The serifs create a horizontal rule that guides the eye, so serif fonts are much better when you’re reading long pieces of text. Sans-serif fonts are more legible which means that... when the serifs are removed your eye can spot read a character much better and much more quickly, and as a result it is much better for spot reading. In an activity like search it turns out you want to facilitate spot reading to a much greater degree than reading long prose.
Here's the 2006 talk: https://stvp.stanford.edu/podcasts/nine-lessons-learned-abou...
Shoutout to Atkinson Hyperlegible Next, designed for the Braille Institut having excellent glyph differentiation ("Next" with variable weight)
https://fonts.google.com/specimen/Atkinson+Hyperlegible+Next
I'm extremely picky and Atkinson Hyperlegible was my favorite variable-width font. Never knew there's a "Next", so +
This is what I switch to whenever a default font annoys me because of poor glyph differentiation. It's what it says on the tin.
IBM Plex is very good. Recently, I have been enjoying https://rsms.me/inter/ for interfaces a bit more (with ss02 for body and ss02+tnum for tables activated).
Inter is the only libre typeface that has good coverage, and produces readable small text on terrible 80 DPI displays. I've tested probably hundreds of them.
But l and I (ell and eye) are identical in Inter.
https://fonts.google.com/specimen/Inter?preview.text=lllll%2...
I never understood why a font designer would ever choose to do that. There should be an ironclad rule that different letters must look different.
You did not check my link and ss02 out, did you?
Then tell me where to download that ss02 and install on PC for docx file and set default in browser?
Hasn't Inter been the default tech font for the last 5 years or so by virtue of being the default font in Figma? The Times New Roman of UI.
I think you have it the other way around.
It's not used because it's the default font in Figma.
It's the fact that it's the best modern alternative to Helvetica, making it universally useful and therefore the default in Figma.
Incidentally, I'll forever mourn that the designers didn't choose to go with a glyph for "1" that is closer to the one in Helvetica.
Inter is the default in Figma because the first designer at Figma was the guy who created it.
Huh, TIL. Thank you!
I guess I can try to argue that it if it weren't as generally useful as Helvetica it wouldn't have been made the default in Figma and it wouldn't be, well, so generally used.
Hah, this one can go on Wikipedia as an example for "chicken or the egg"! IMO, there's probably a number of other fonts that could've been chosen rather than Inter as default Figma font, and if they had been, they'd now be more ubiquitous than Inter. Of course, we'll never know. Unless someone here is looking to do a research study into popularity of fonts over time compared to popularity of Figma and seeing how strong the correlation is - maybe a weekend project for someone into typography ;)
Oh, is that why everyone uses it? I just assumed people wanted knockoff San Francisco on purpose
Ah, it initially appeared that the capital I and the lowercase L have identical-looking glyphs. But scrolling down, I see the ss02 and tnum features add noticeable glyphs. Looks like a nice typeface.
Inter has also become my default.
Nice. Inter even has "U+1E9E" "Latin Capital Letter Sharp S" and two lower case sharp s variants as well.
Is U+1E9E used for anything besides ALLCAPS text?
Inter or linter?
Feature ss02 Disambiguation (one of many)
Alternate glyph set that increases visual difference between similar-looking characters.
Why isn't it the default? :( I'm rarely in control of how a font is used.
Likewise the absence of a stroke through the zero. Without context, for example in a Wifi password, indistinguishable from uppercase letter O.
I really enjoyed reading through [1] as it gives a lot of insight into what goes into making a font. However I wonder what incentives does IBM have for putting this much work into making it public, accessible and widely used. Wouldn't the ubiquity of the font make it less strong for their brand identity?
It says "IBM" in the name so I'm actually often reminded of the company via seeing the font in the wild.
And somehow they did seem to capture a distinctive IBM vibe when designing it, whilst still making it general enough to be used by everyone else
That's why I love the Readex Pro font. It also has glyphs for Arabic and a lot more languages in the same file, so I can use one font file for everything.
Depending on your phone manufacturer, zFont 3 has been solid for me for setting system wide fonts.
I have Iosevka for everything I can set a custom font to.
My full list of ambiguous letters, from https://gajus.com/blog/avoiding-visually-ambiguous-character...
- O / 0 - I / l / 1 / 7 - 5 / S - 2 / Z - 8 / B - 6 / G - 9 / q / g
I use the following:
$ cat passgen.sh
#!/bin/sh
export LC_ALL=C
printf "%.16s\n" "$(/usr/bin/openssl rand -base64 32 | /usr/bin/tr -d 'lIOSBGZ')"
This way if it looks like a number then it is. I don't usually mess up q/g and u/v with my fonts but its easy enough to ban more characters.O / D can also be an issue with some fonts.
U / V
?
Plex Monospace is great for coding as well.
yes. zed has a fork too https://github.com/zed-industries/zed-fonts
Looking at yet another new sans typeface reminds me of looking through all the shades of white at a paint store. After a while, I just can't tell the differences or why they matter. Other people seem to have a talent for paint colors. Maybe same with fonts?
anything on digital.gov is at best on life support given 18F was disbanded and much of the government digital service efforts have been neglected
The fonts are open and on github
The Secretary of State recently decreed that sans serif fonts were woke and mandated all communications use Times New Roman.
God, I was so hopeful that you were joking but I guess I should know better by now.
I thought it was a joke, then I checked.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/dec/10/trump-times-...
The quote is milder and the "woke" bit was added by others, but the context is essentially correct.
In an interview, the font's creator took it as a compliment and was a good sport about it.
I'd say “wasteful” diversity move == woke in this context, not sure if that's milder. Just another distraction thrown at us to keep us at each other's throats. (+ keeping better alignment with the carrot man's branding)
Psychoanalysing politicians aside, serif fonts used to be considered more legible, but that doesn't hold any more that much (e.g. much of research shows that people tend to underestimate familiarity when assessing legibility).
I actually agree with this but TNR is so tired for a serif font.
Times New Roman is the worst serif font they could have picked.
To be fair, it's replacing Calibri, so it's still an improvement. We should just use Garamond or Caslon for everything, but that'll never happen. :(
The other frontpage article on the same topic[1] makes a fairly good case that both Times and Calibri suck in this role (not least because they are default fonts and receive the social connotations of that) and notes in passing that the US Supreme Court uses Century Schoolbook, IMO a solid choice (helped also by their competent formatting) and perhaps a less artsy look than Garamond &co.
I'd go with Baskerville personally.
I like Crimson Pro
History of the Schwabacher Judenletter repeats
Interesting! I knew that the Nazis repudiated Fraktur fonts in 1941 but I never knew the story behind it.
I doubt they got the memo.
Previous discussion 2019: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=19607371
Thanks! Macroexpanded:
Public Sans – A strong, neutral typeface for text or display - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=19607371 - April 2019 (237 comments)
I must say it's very pleasant. Much better than a lot of the fonts I see on the web these days.
Looks nearly identical to Helvetica when I switch back and forth with inspector tool. Some letters are different and there’s some kerning changes but large parts look the same. at least to my untrained eye
What does "strong" mean here? Doesn't it contradict "neutral"?
Anyway, the "c" and "e" are closing in too much.
Switzerland is strong and neutral. Pardon my little joke, as I have lots of Swiss friends. I hear ya.
Masculine, not-woke (asleep), but not like a sleepy Joe, like a toddler who takes a nap.
Are there any designers here who can explain when the differences between Public Sans and Roboto Sans and when to use one or the other?
I don’t think it’s that straightforward to answer that. They’re both body fonts. Public Sans is a bit wider (as it isn’t geometric) and roboto seems a bit thicker. Besides these bits which can be worked around, they’re functionally too similar. Maybe you’d prefer to use Public Sans because it’s less condensed which works well for readability of smaller fonts that would be in a body of text. But you can just adjust a number of things to get what you’re looking for here.
A more vague answer I can think of is that it’s preferential and doesn’t matter to most — with designers just being highly particular about preferences, in a way that isn’t really open to objective choice. One font may display slightly better but the other font pairs better with the title font. Or we’ll look for specific issues that I don’t really see in either fonts.
I'd say Public Sans is definitely a bit more readable for me (some vision impairment). Was kind of hard to tell why I liked it so much first looking at it today.. I saw a comparison of it with a few other Serif fonts and it's definitely the one I like the most visually myself. Will probably switch to using it moving forward over Roboto Sans, which has been my go to for nearly a decade.
Nifty... looks pretty nice.
related: USWDS React Component Library https://github.com/trussworks/react-uswds
Weirdly, it reminds me of Aptos, the new default font in Microsoft products.
To clarify, it is the default font for office documents, not the default UI font.
The "Accessibility support" link gives me a 404 Not Found. I guess that's too close to any kind of DEI the US government would allow these days...
I want to like it but I feel like it neuters everything I like about Franklin Gothic/Libre Franklin.
For some reason I always thought that Plus Jakarta Sans was forked from on Public Sans.
<https://tokotype.github.io/plusjakarta-sans/>
Which for some other reason always makes me think of the book The Jakarta Method:
<https://www.librarything.com/work/24301785/t/The-Jakarta-Met...>
Phew, that is very close to Plex.
I must say I like Libre Franklin (which they compare it to in the github repo) better, especially the rounded vertices.
Didn't they throw a fit over Calibri being "woke" or something recently? I hope this department got a clearance from the whitehouse on how woke it feels. Apparently, the previous admin worded it using terms like "inclusive" (of the visually impaired, adhd,etc..) and that was somehow "woke". I wonder if this font is a direct consequence of that.
This font was created as part of the US digital service during the second Obama administration https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Web_Design_System
Isn't this from the people who hate Calibri?
No, looks like it was started late in Obama's second term. As for the current guys, they would probably use Instrument Serif for body text if they could.
I googled Instrument Serif and google fonts page is telling me something with it's choice of lorem ipsum https://fonts.google.com/specimen/Instrument+Serif
I don't hate it.. it's a bit too condensed for my taste though.
Oh it's the "transhumanist serif" every AI startup uses now.
Color me... unperplexed
Went down a short rabbit hole from this comment and they actually are using a condensed serif font like that on www.whitehouse.gov titles at the moment.
No, this was a project by 18F and the U.S. Web Design group that debued several years back.
This predates the Calibri-Times debacle by quite a few years.
Funnily enough, if you Google "Calibri", the page itself is in Calibri. I've never seen that happen for any other font.
It also works for Open Sans, on my Linux system at least. Probably only works for fonts that are installed and/or can be licensed for this.
It’s an Easter egg, also for Times New Roman and a few others.
Works for comic sans.
Try Garamond!
That's just the State Department. The federal government is a huge amalgamation of agencies, each with its own set of goals, responsibilities, and quirks. Even down at the local level, I've had a hard time getting the county and the city to agree on who owns the storm drain where the neighborhood connects to the highway.
As a utility designer in my day job who frequents HN for real fun, this comment hits hard.
Another generic limited font that isn't solving anything.
No Arabic, Cyrillic, Hebrew, not even Greek letters (poor frats and physicists). I understand it's a product of the US government, but don't they have international relations requiring using characters other than Latin? It's not even a recent font, so you'd think inclusivity was important. So much for the cultural pluralism.
And a site without a character table, which means I had to download the font to check if it's of any use.
Not a great job.
Looking forward to the National Design Studio getting it's arms around this
why is the federal government using tax dollars to develop fonts?
They didn't develop a new font, they improved an existing font that's packaged inside a larger design library used for building government websites. Creating a standard that states, cities, municipalities, townships, etc can utilize for digital services improves access for all.
$1M to the US Government is like dropping pennies, less than that actually. By the READMEs, this font is actually a modification to another font and more sleuthing revealed that the author actually worked on this in his spare time.
drop enough pennies here and there and it adds up
That's a comical amount of pennies
That's where most of their budget comes from I think.
Is this a problem?
No way fonts isn't a solved problem by now.
This is like saying design is a solved problem.
Is it not? Designers keep designing but everyone says they prefer Windows XP.
Worse. It’s like saying ART is a solved problem.
There are a lot of very strong opinions on relatively minor variances. I really like this font, but apparently it isn't nearly as complete as some alternatives.
I've tended towards fonts that I just find readable at the relatively small sizes most sites tend to use. I like Roboto a lot, I like this slightly more... I'm not as big on the Libre Franklin it's also being compared to. It's really personal and some people care more or less than others depending on their needs, and even visibility concerns.