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Encyclopedia > Glyphs


A glyph is a carved figure or character, incised or in relief; a carved pictograph; hence, a pictograph representing a form originally adopted for sculpture, whether carved or painted. Augustan English scholars of the early 18th century, imitating French antiquaries, adopted glyph from the Greek word meaning a "carving." 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 adapted "hieroglyphic" as a Latin adjective). But "glyph" first came to widespread European attention with the engravings and lithographs from Frederick Catherwood's drawings of undeciphered glyphs of the Maya civilization in the early 1840s. "Glyphs" still bring connotations of Maya glyphs to mind.


In typography, a glyph is a graphical representation of a character, sometimes several characters or only a part of character. The actual glyphs in typography were originally the carved and cast characters of a font. A character is a textual unit, whereas a glyph is a graphical unit. For example, the sequence of ffi will be represented by one glyph in TeX, since the three characters will be combined into a single ligature.


In the simple case, for a given font (typeface and size), each character corresponds to a single glyph but this is not always the case, especially in a language with a large alphabet where one character may correspond to several glyphs or several characters to one glyph (a character encoding). The term is usually used in particular reference to outline fonts.


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  Results from FactBites:
 
Embedding Glyph Identifiers in XML Documents (760 words)
A glyph identifier is registered through the procedure for glyphs in ISO/IEC 10036 and its technical corrigendum 1.
Glyph Reference Language is a language for embedding glyph identifier(s) with XML documents.
The value of this attribute is a glyph identifier according to ISO/IEC 10036 and its technical corrigendum 1.
glyph (640 words)
Glyph component determines which data component is used to scale and rotate the glyphs.
The vector mode scales the glyph by the magnitude of the vector, and also rotates the glyph in 2 or 3 dimensions based on the vector subcomponent values.
The component mode scales the glyph in 2 or 3 dimension using the magnitudes of the vector subcomponents.
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