The World's Smallest Legible Font 280
hasanabbas1987 writes "From the article: 'Well 'technically' they aren't the smallest fonts in the world as if they were you wouldn't be able to read even a single letter, but, you should be able to read the entire paragraph in the picture given above... we did. A Computer science professor called Ken Perlin designed these tiny fonts and you can fit 500 reasonable words in a resolution of 320 x 240 space. There are at the moment the smallest legible fonts in the world.'"
Legibility (Score:2)
Won't the actual legibility of the font have a lot to do with pixel size and spacing? Sure, you can pack that font into a tiny space, but if it's all broken up in jaggies, can you READ it?
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Not to mention screen resolution.
But yes, pixel spacing is key, and it is not legible on this laptop (1920x1200 native resolution).
Even with magnifying glass (8x) large parts of it are un-readable.
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Hmm. I can read it at the same screen resolution. Are you familiar with the text to begin with? I am. Maybe that helps a lot.
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BTW, laptops with 1920x1200 displays are not common. Is yours also a ThinkPad W series?
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Dell 9400. (16inch diagonal).
Its actually easier to read on my desktop which has the same resolution display but the displays are larger. (24inch)
My attempts (Score:5, Interesting)
Agree, this is not legible, especially when enlarged. And, here's my font [angband.pl] from a good while ago which is not only slightly smaller (or would be if it was variable pitch) but also a good deal more readable. Can be enlarged without loss, too.
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No, it wouldn't, because the font relies on subpixel bitmapping.
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Just because the font is designed to take advantage of sub pixel rendering doesn't mean that it can't be rendered without it.
Yes, in this case it does. RTFA [nyu.edu]?
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What part of "assumes that" in TFA didn't you understand?
There is no version without subpixel rendering -- it's a designed bitmap colour font with inherent subpixel rendering, not a "normal" font that uses ClearType.
Zoom in on it to look how it will look on displays without subpixel rendering. That's no guess.
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Re:Legibility (Score:5, Funny)
Tilt your head 90 degrees and you should be alright.
You're welcome.
Re:Legibility (Score:5, Funny)
now it's all upside down!!
you are useless to me!!
Re:Legibility (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Legibility (Score:4, Funny)
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Now I'm right back where I started and i think I can puke pea green soup.
Re:Legibility (Score:5, Informative)
The problem is that these fonts are designed for LCD displays that are RGBRGB horizontally, not vertically. So rotating any display while using these fonts reduces the legibility due to the sub-pixel optimizations that have been done to make the font legible at it's size.
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Even worse, for those who can't read that tiny fonts (whether it is because they have high-DPI displays or just plain bad eyesight), it doesn't help to zoom in on the bitmapped text -- it becomes an illegible mess because it relies on subpixel scaling, which doesn't zoom.
Anyhow, legibility is in the eye of the beholder. What's the smallest legible font for one person won't be for the next. Which is why we let people choose their own fonts these days.
The 1990s are calling -- they want their bitmapped fonts
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I beg to differ. I scrolled up to the top of the page, and looked at it with my 26" 1920*1200 LCD. I could read it at about 3 ft. I stood up and walked back 6ft and couldn't read it.
Then I held down control, and pushed up the mouse wheel, doubling the size of that image... Guess what, I COULD read it at that point. Yeah, it's just as blurry as it was when I was 3ft from it, but before at 6ft it was just jagged vertical lines.
I understand your point, subpixel scaling only works on a relatively small scale
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Sort of (Score:2)
There is the odd word here and there that I can't quite make out.
I would tell you which words those are but...
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Try telling us that way.
T
Declaration of Independence (Score:4, Insightful)
Easy to Test (Score:3, Insightful)
Just read it backwards, word for word. I have to admit it was a bit harder, but it was still legible for me. Considering that this is maybe three point font, I find it pretty noteworthy.
Re:Easy to Test (Score:5, Funny)
Just read it backwards, word for word. I have to admit it was a bit harder, but it was still legible for me. Considering that this is maybe three point font, I find it pretty noteworthy.
I tried that, but the first word was "exercise" which just turned me off from the whole thing.
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It may be 3 points (1.06 mm) on your display, but it certainly isn't on mine.
This is a bitmapped font, and how big it is in points willl vary depending on the physical DPI of the displaying device.
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Low-res game font (Score:2, Insightful)
"Reading the font is also made easier by virtue of it being a text many of us would recognize."
Personally, I recognise it because this looks like any other sans serif ~8 pixel-high font from any low-res game of the early 90s or so. Nothing special AT ALL here.
Resolution useless, words/square inch needed (Score:2, Insightful)
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I remember doing that in high school. Teacher said we could put anything on a 3x5" notecard for a math test, so I used Publisher and printed stuff out at font size 4 or so.
Re:Resolution useless, words/square inch needed (Score:4, Funny)
One time in college, the professor gave out .pdf documents of the class notes. We were allowed to bring three papers with us.
Well, I had this great software that could print four pages on one piece of paper. and the HP laserjet in the lab could do the same thing -- instant 16 pages on one piece of paper. I even brought a loupe [wikipedia.org] into class to help me read such tiny print. Fun days, good class.
Comment (Score:5, Funny)
ts;dr
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I'd like to see Microsoft designing a font like this. Of course they wouldn't be able to, since they suck and all.
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I too could not get through that small old wall of text. They sould have broken it up into millimeter sized paragraphs. Maybe I'll have my browser read it out loud with the volume set really really low.
I can only read the first line (Score:2)
Beyond the first line, the text becomes too dense and I lose track of what line I'm on. I only need that, in order to know what it says, but that doesn't really count.
Original Source (Score:5, Informative)
Skip the blogspam, go to the source: http://mrl.nyu.edu/~perlin/homepage2006/tinyfont/index.html [nyu.edu]
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But how is that poor blogger going to keep up their ad revenue if Slashdot links the real story and not a third party version?
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Thanks for the link. That .png version seem a bit more legible than the .jpg in TFA.
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THANK YOU! This one has more of the color intact, and is MUCH easier to read.
Why is this even an idea? (Score:2)
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Not only that, but what is the point of having a font so small it can barely be read? I can only think this is applicable to a very small display, where space is a premium and readability is of modest concern.
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World's most illiterate editors (Score:2)
"There are at the moment the smallest legible fonts in the world."
I will give you all about 10 seconds to spot the glaring error.
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Error? I see more than one.
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I wasn't sure whether to ding them for the lack of commas around "at the moment". Are there other errors?
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Are there other errors?
Well, the very first word is wrong. It should be They.
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there=their?
Please, use proper units. (Score:2)
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well just complete assumptions based on 2 min of looking around
142,544,498 items in LoC
~100,000 words per Average book
14,254,449,800,000 words per LoC
This font is 500 words per 320x240 = 76,800 pixels
((14,254,449,800,000/500)*76,800) = 2.18948349x10^15 pixels per LoC
a screen with 46,791,917x46,791,916 resolution per LoC
or 516,387,615 count 30in Dell/Apple Displays per LoC
Warning! Source article image is a JPEG. (Score:3, Informative)
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Its JPEG form wasn’t its source form [sitepoint.com].
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I think you are correct. Side-by-side, the PNG is more readable, IMO.
Nice, but... what about a, e, and o? (Score:3, Insightful)
That's pretty amazing. Except that the letters a, e, and o are nearly indistinguishable. To prove it is the smallest legible font, one would have to show that a long enough sequence of just the letters a, e and o could be spelled back by a reader. aeoeoaoeoeoaoeoaoeeeoaaaoeoaoa. I doubt it.
Practically speaking, that would mean a word like onomatopeia would be hard to identify. Of course, the context in which a word shows up probably accounts for more than half of the reason a reader can identify that word so quickly in a sentence.
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Legible partly due to the content? (Score:3, Insightful)
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How on earth is this news? (Score:2)
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Where's your fuzzy .png conversion of a fuzzy .jpg capture to provie it?
If you don't have a way of showing us a lossless image that faithfully reproduces all of the degradation of the original .jpg compression, I don't think you can expect us to get too excited about this alleged stick figure in mud.
Flashback to TRS-80 Color Computer days (Score:4, Interesting)
That looks EXACTLY like the text I was staring at when I was a kid with my CoCo2 running a 72 column display. The fonts were all artifacted and all that. It was tough but it was at least a good thing that I was a kid and capable of dealing with it comfortably. The machine was originally intended to use a 32 column text display, but the 4 color "high res" display was too tempting for some to resist and they decided to write some word processing and desktop software for the thing. It worked...more or less... sorta... intolerable by today's standards but a feat in those days.
/facepalm (Score:2)
In JPG format.
Heres the original source (you skip two useless blogs)
http://mrl.nyu.edu/~perlin/homepage2006/tinyfont/index.html [nyu.edu]
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Heres the class that draw the stuff
http://mrl.nyu.edu/~perlin/homepage2006/tinyfont/Grid3b.class [nyu.edu]
Ken Perlin? (Score:3, Interesting)
Of Perlin noise fame?
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Yes.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perlin_noise [wikipedia.org]
And apparently he won an award for his work on Tron, too.
Legible? But what were they trying to write? (Score:2)
"When in the poutse of human events it becanes necessarv far pne people to dissoke the pollitical bands which have comectef then widh pnother amd oo assinne annony dne power of the oaritv the soparare anf oquol statipn fo whiich the Lows of Wature anif of Nowre's Gof..."
If that's what the text is supposed to say, then heck yes it's a resounding succeff.
If I wanted a case of eyestrain... (Score:2)
If I wanted a case of eyestrain, I'd have bought a shiny new 3D TV which would at least allow me to oogle larger than life boobies while hurting myself.
However, this font may produce some "hi-res" ascii movies... someone should run Deep Throat through the ascii encoder with it.
Well-known: you only need 3x5 pix (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Well-known: you only need 3x5 pix (Score:5, Informative)
I spent a good bit of time designing 5x7 fonts back then, since I was heavily into display hardware back when it took a board full of TTL to make a 256 x 128 pixel text display.
Smallest legible font... (Score:2)
...at what pixel density?
What about Asian Fonts? (Score:4, Informative)
Any reduction in font sizes for readability must have separate standards for Asian characters, or the more complex ones will just appear as blobs.
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Legible, under good conditions (Score:2)
High schoolers will love this (Score:2)
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Yeah, I remember those classes. I spent so much time trying to write really small that I accidentally learned the material.
Quite the contrary (Score:2)
I consider it a quite large but ilegible font.... or is it just my eyes?
dissolve the political bunds (Score:4, Informative)
so much for pivot (Score:2)
Many small devices detect screen pivot these days, but this is a single orientation font.
Borderline legible. (Score:2)
I thought this kind of font fell under the purview of pixel fonts. So it's not really anything new except that this particular font uses shades of grey to indicate certain shapes. I'm hard-pressed to call it truly legible. It's borderline; I have to concentrate a bit to identify certain letters and some of it I'm deciphering mostly because of context.
I do think this font may have a future as legal info and disclaimer copy.
Can't read it. (Score:3, Interesting)
My compound eyes were annoyed trying to read them, and I gave up. :(
Perfect for EULAs. (Score:3, Funny)
I imagine InstallShield will license these at once for click-through software licenses which need fine print -- really fine print.
A smaller one, using sub-pixel antialiasing (Score:2)
Meh, this one has smaller letters [distractionware.com], and is still marginally readable. Although with the linked text, the words make it easier to work out what it says.
the smallest font is in legal disclosures (Score:2)
like credit card terms
Sub pixel font (Score:2)
Legible? by who? (Score:2)
I'm looking at it with bifocals and without, no joy, I would have to use a reading glass to see this.
Not legible (Score:2)
1280x1024 (native res) on a Dell 1905FP, I'm not more than 3 feet away, and it looks like crap. I can barely make some of the words out. I do wear glasses, but that would mean I *should* help, one would think. Scaling it up merely makes it look even shittier.
Nice... (Score:2)
Nice, the linked article got a hit in Trend Micro.
Web reputation result: This URL is currently listed as malicious.
Well, more likely something loaded on that page is.
Antialiased? (Score:2)
Call me a traditionalist, but a font is not defined to be antialiased. That's a color image, not a demonstration of a font.
Article down or moved (Score:2)
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Very true. And a similar font existed in varius Apple][ graphic mode rendered text. 5 pixels tall 3 pixels wide + 1 pixel for line and letter spacing and you had the font.
Or if you go for the least pixels, use Braille points. 6 (2x3) points font.
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> And a similar font existed in varius Apple][ graphic mode rendered text. 5 pixels tall 3 pixels wide + 1 pixel for line and letter spacing and you had the font.
FTFY.
HGR. 280x190, with color bleed. Vertical lines would be green or pink.
e.g.
http://www.retrocpu.com/apple-ii/images/games/c/castle_wolfenstein.png [retrocpu.com]
> A Computer science professor called Ken Perlin
Understatement of the year -- this guy _invented_ Perlin noise.
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Yes, most of us old-timers remember tiny bitmap fonts on various systems and GUIs. Some of us even made our own for various purposes.
This is a new thing because it's treating the RGB subpixels of an LCD as individual pixels, effectively tripling the horizontal resolution of the font. I don't remember seeing anyone on any system doing that. This allows characters to be more true to their intended forms. For example, the letter W can now be done in a much narrower space - 3 pixels wide to have a recognizable
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8 lines are a "waste." I had a 5 pt font on my HP48SX/GX. Someone even hacked in lower case case. (Technically, 6 pts, since you need 1 line for spacing.)
See the editor included with the "Jazz" assembler.
http://www.hpcalc.org/hp48/programming/asm/ [hpcalc.org]
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Forgot a pic of the font ...
http://www.hpcalc.org/hp48/programming/asm/sshots/jazz68.gif [hpcalc.org]
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Which on my display is a shedload easier to read than the cited example.
Course I had a hp48...
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Exactly. I'd like to know where this Comp Sci professor got his qualifications, and whether he's old enough to have been around when computers had a res below 800x600.