From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
variant glyphs representing the character
a
(allographs of
a) in the
Zapfino typeface.
In
typography, a glyph is the shape given in a
particular
typeface to a specific
grapheme or
symbol.
The term for the abstract entity represented by a glyph is
character: a typographical character may be a grapheme (an
element of a
writing system), but also a
numeral, a
punctuation mark, or a pictorial or decorative symbol (such
as
dingbats, or
Unicode's "Miscellaneous
Symbols").
Two or more glyphs representing the same grapheme, either
interchangeably or context-dependent, are called
allographs.
In
graphonomics, the term glyph is used for a
non-character, i.e: either a sub-character or multi-character
pattern.
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Contents
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1
Etymology
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2
Typography
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3
Other uses
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4
See also
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Etymology
The term has been used in English since
1727,
loaned from glyphe in use by French antiquaries (since
1701),
from Greek γλυφη "a carving," from γλύφειν "to hollow out,
engrave, carve" (cognate to Latin glubere "to peel" and
English cleave).
Compare the carved and incised "sacred glyphs"
hieroglyphs, which have had a longer history in English
dating from the first Elizabethan translation of Plutarch, who
adopted "hieroglyphic" as a Latin adjective.
But "glyph" first came to widespread European attention with
the engravings and in
guild wars lithographs from
Frederick Catherwood's drawings of undeciphered glyphs of
the
Maya civilization in the early
1840s.
Typography
In
typography, a glyph is a particular graphical
representation of a
grapheme, or sometimes several graphemes in combination (a
composed glyph), or only a part of a grapheme. In
computing as well as typography, the term
character refers to a grapheme or grapheme-like unit of
text, as found in
natural language
writing systems (scripts). A character or grapheme is
a unit of text, whereas a glyph is a
graphical unit.
For example, the sequence ffi contains three
characters, but can be represented by one glyph, the
three characters being combined into a single unit known as a
ligature. Conversely, some
typewriters require the use of multiple glyphs to depict a
single character (for example, two
hyphens in place of a
dash,
or an overstruck
apostrophe and
period in place of an
exclamation mark).
Most typographic glyphs originate from the characters of a
typeface. In a typeface each character typically
corresponds to a single glyph, but there are exceptions, such as
a font used for a language with a large alphabet or complex
writing system, where one character may correspond to several
glyphs, or several characters to one glyph.
Other uses
- In the
Appaloosa Interactive
video games
Ecco the Dolphin and Ecco: The Tides of Time,
a "glyph" is one of several different types of
crystalline objects which are usually larger than the
protagonist, Ecco. Glyphs may block routes, give a
"password" for passing routes blocked by other glyphs,
restore Ecco's energy, give hints, or save the game in
certain levels.
See also
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Typeface
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Punchcutting
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Character encoding
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Character (computing)
Categories:
Infographics |
Symbols |
Typography |
Graphemes