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scooping | 20:01 Tue 18th Mar 2014 | Technology
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Why are the a and the g produced by a keyboard different shapes than one would use in conventional writing
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Because they are in Helvetica font and we generally use Cursive font for handwriting.
20:04 Tue 18th Mar 2014
you could try changing the font if you want differently shaped letters
Because they are in Helvetica font and we generally use Cursive font for handwriting.
because of the font you use, in Italics you would see the conventional ag
Helvetica has taken over the world. It's everywhere.
That didn't work but it does in an e-mail
hard to say, and the r many people use is nothing like the standard printed version either. I think handwriting and printing have just developed along slightly different tracks. But different fonts do use different letters.
It would be interesting to ask about people's handwriting styles. I use italics when using my italic nib fountain pen but use cursive when writing with a felt tip pen, biro (shudder) or pencil.
I'm not sure that 'g' is very different from handwriting but I agree that 'a' rarely has an ascending sweep when handwritten.
cursive fonts are probably already installed on your computer e.g. http://i1347.photobucket.com/albums/p701/bibblebub/cursive_zps9a46aeaf.jpg?t=1395173789
I can't point to a source, but I think it goes back to the first days of printing as a way of putting an alignment into each letter to set a straight line of type, giving spacing and a proportional, consistent look to printed words
My handwriting is very distinctive,
I write my lower case a's exactly as they appear here.
I decided in my teens that I wanted to make my handwriting stand out and be different, and I have written this way ever since. X
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thanks
You are welcome and thank you for BA, scooping.

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