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Verdana is a sans-serif typeface designed by Matthew Carter for Microsoft Corporation, with hand-hinting done by Agfa Monotype?s Tom Rickner.
Released in 1996, Verdana was bundled with subsequent versions of Microsoft's Windows operating system, as well as their Office and Internet Explorer software on both Windows and Mac OS. In addition, it was long available for download from Microsoft's Web site even by users of Linux and other Unix-like operating systems. As a result, it is now installed on most desktop computers. The redistributable downloadable file is still available from a third-party web site; see #External links.
Bearing similarities to humanist sans serif typefaces such as Frutiger, Verdana has been designed with computer screen use in mind, and is extremely readable at small sizes, because of its lack of serifs, large x-height, wide proportions, loose letter-spacing, large counters, and emphasized distinctions between similarly-shaped characters. As a result, it is often chosen by Web designers attempting to cram large amounts of text into a small space.
The Tahoma typeface is similar to Verdana but with tighter letter-spacing; other similar faces include Frutiger and Bitstream Vera Sans.
The following paragraph is in Verdana if it is installed on your machine:
that web authors should not specify the use of Verdana on a web page. They argue that while Verdana is readable at small font sizes due to its high x-height, some other typefaces like Times New Roman are hard to read at the same point size. The effect is to reduce readability for those people reading the page on computers where Verdana or similar fonts like Bitstream Vera Sans are not installed or if users override the site's font with significantly different fonts, especially serif ones.
Verdana (v. 2.43) uses a nonstandard position for combining diacritical marks, causing them to display on the following character instead of the preceding. This makes it unsuitable for Unicode-encoded text such as Cyrillic or Greek. If you have Verdana installed, then you will see diacritics displayed over the letter "e", whereas they should have appeared over the letter "a". This bug does not usually reveal itself with Latin letters. This is because some font display engines substitute sequences of base character + combining character with a precomposed character glyph.
In Verdana:
а̀е а́е а̃е а̉е | ὰε άε α̃ε α̉ε | àe áe ãe ảe
In your browser's current font:
а̀е а́е а̃е а̉е | ὰε άε α̃ε α̉ε | àe áe ãe ảe
(The first column is Cyrillic, the second column is Greek, and the third column is Latin)