philmophlegm: (Doom)
philmophlegm ([personal profile] philmophlegm) wrote2013-09-15 01:31 pm
Entry tags:

Font / Typeface AKICOLJ

1. Does anyone know the name of the font that MS-DOS used?

2. When I was at infant school (1976 - 1979), lots of things like reading flash cards and name badges seemed to have the same sans serif typeface. Is this still used and what is / was it called?

[identity profile] ozisim.livejournal.com 2013-09-15 01:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Can't help you with the 70's typeface problem... My school used a hand-cranked lithograph to copy handwritten notes until the great lamington drive of 1988, which raised enough money to buy a photocopier and an apple IIb computer for the office.

But I'm pretty sure the MS DOS font was Courier. (Though our old MS DOS-based unix database shell used Terminal.)
Edited 2013-09-15 13:57 (UTC)

[identity profile] parrot-knight.livejournal.com 2013-09-15 02:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Terminal - I'm sure that's the one I remember seeing on university computers. I agree that Windows MS DOS windows on Windows seem to use Courier, though.

[identity profile] philmophlegm.livejournal.com 2013-09-15 02:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Terminal seems to be the closest answer. Wikipedia says that it "is designed to approximate the font normally used in MS-DOS", without saying what the original font is. Maybe it doesn't actually have a name.

sally_maria: (Default)

[personal profile] sally_maria 2013-09-15 02:16 pm (UTC)(link)
If you mean the font used on the command-line, it probably didn't have a name. I'm pretty sure it was whatever the operating system equivalent of hard-wired in - I don't remember any way to change it, and that's the kind of decorative tweaking I would have wanted to play with back in those days.