Nick Heer on the MacOS 14 Sonoma Typography Palette
Nick Heer, Pixel Envy:
For a long time, this palette was a dry list of checkboxes
and disclosure triangles. A user would need to first know this
palette exists, and then know what each option did. But, in a
recent version of MacOS, the palette has been updated with
icons that more clearly display what will change.
Depending on the font file in question, there are many
different options available, and the numerically differentiated
“stylistic sets” have never been clear. This is much nicer.
This is indeed a nice update to a little-known but wonderful standard feature in Cocoa’s text system. Who says AppKit is dead?
(One gripe I have is that the small caps options are no longer labelled “small caps” — you just sort of have to know what they are from the glyphs alone. And, oddly, on my Mac, for many but not all fonts, instead of seeing “A → A” to indicate small caps, I see a dollar sign: “$ → $”.
★
Nick Heer, Pixel Envy:
For a long time, this palette was a dry list of checkboxes
and disclosure triangles. A user would need to first know this
palette exists, and then know what each option did. But, in a
recent version of MacOS, the palette has been updated with
icons that more clearly display what will change.
Depending on the font file in question, there are many
different options available, and the numerically differentiated
“stylistic sets” have never been clear. This is much nicer.
This is indeed a nice update to a little-known but wonderful standard feature in Cocoa’s text system. Who says AppKit is dead?
(One gripe I have is that the small caps options are no longer labelled “small caps” — you just sort of have to know what they are from the glyphs alone. And, oddly, on my Mac, for many but not all fonts, instead of seeing “A → A” to indicate small caps, I see a dollar sign: “$ → $”.