Link round-up for December 2017
One of the problems with free fonts is that they often don’t have special characters that are necessary for proper display of characters from other languages, or symbols.
Google Noto is a series of fonts meant to have almost every character (and emoji!) in as many languages as possible. When I scrolled down the list and saw, “Canadian aboriginal,” I knew they were serious.
I downloaded Noto Sans, and was impressed.
Not only are there over 30 variations of Noto Sans, including thin, bold, condensed, extended, and combinations thereof, going into “Insert symbol” to see the individual characters is eye-opening. You think you’re a typographic sophisticate for recognizing and using an interrobang? Noto has that, and an inverted interrobang. There are combinations of letters and accents and umlauts and currency symbols I have never seen before.
The range of options is, frankly, staggering. There is no font package that comes Windows standard with this many options. Buying a font package with this many options would usually cost you many hundreds of dollars.
And Noto fonts are all free.
You have no excuse to use a lower case letter x in place of a multiplication sign, or not put an accent in a co-author's name, ever again.
Hat tip to Robert J. Sawyer.
Asada and colleagues have a new paper reviewing effective graphs, particularly in the are of public health. They’re very big into dot charts. I’m not convinced by their representation of variation in dot charts, though.
Hat tip to Hilda Bastian.
Another hat tip to Hilda for spotting a timeline of data visualizations and graphs.
Tony Roepke has good advice:
Google Noto is a series of fonts meant to have almost every character (and emoji!) in as many languages as possible. When I scrolled down the list and saw, “Canadian aboriginal,” I knew they were serious.
I downloaded Noto Sans, and was impressed.
Not only are there over 30 variations of Noto Sans, including thin, bold, condensed, extended, and combinations thereof, going into “Insert symbol” to see the individual characters is eye-opening. You think you’re a typographic sophisticate for recognizing and using an interrobang? Noto has that, and an inverted interrobang. There are combinations of letters and accents and umlauts and currency symbols I have never seen before.
The range of options is, frankly, staggering. There is no font package that comes Windows standard with this many options. Buying a font package with this many options would usually cost you many hundreds of dollars.
And Noto fonts are all free.
You have no excuse to use a lower case letter x in place of a multiplication sign, or not put an accent in a co-author's name, ever again.
Hat tip to Robert J. Sawyer.
• • • • •
Asada and colleagues have a new paper reviewing effective graphs, particularly in the are of public health. They’re very big into dot charts. I’m not convinced by their representation of variation in dot charts, though.
Hat tip to Hilda Bastian.
• • • • •
Another hat tip to Hilda for spotting a timeline of data visualizations and graphs.
• • • • •
Tony Roepke has good advice:
Note to poster presenters...don’t go out for a cigarette break right before your poster session.
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