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AR / VR (XR) Typography Guidelines v1.0
  • Get Started
  • Basic Concepts
    • Text Rendering
    • Type Anatomy
    • Readability vs Legibility
    • 2D vs 3D Text
  • Reading Experience
    • Visual
      • Visual Acuity
      • Spatial Frequency
      • Crowding
      • Foveal and Parafoveal Reading
    • Technical Aspects
      • Aberrations
      • Field of View
      • Resolution and Refresh Rate
  • Type Classification in XR
    • Introduction
    • Anchoring of Information
    • Placement Zones
    • Types of Text
      • Text in HUD
      • Text for long reading
      • Sticky info text
      • Signage text
      • Responsive text
      • Ticker text
  • Type Selection
    • Font Weight
    • Stroke Contrast
    • Width
    • x-height
    • Counters
    • Joints/Intersections
    • Stroke Endings
    • Letter-Spacing
  • Coming Soon
    • Typesetting
      • Text Size
      • Alignment
      • Length
      • Rhythm
      • Hierarchy
    • Placement
    • Legibility of Typefaces
    • Accessibility
    • Language Support
    • Recommended Typefaces
    • Unity Template
  • ☕️ Support my Research
  • 🙏Acknowledgement
  • 🤝Feedback
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  1. Type Selection

x-height

x-height is the height of the lowercase letters, disregarding ascenders or descenders, typically exemplified by the letter x. The relationship of the x-height to the body defines the perceived type size. A typeface with a large x-height looks much bigger than a typeface with a small x-height at the same size.

The typefaces with large x-height render well in busy backgrounds by allowing counters of an optimum size which aid legibility. Especially, the letters with three horizontal strokes such as a,e,s benefit from higher x-height.

Typefaces with large x-height are more legible when viewed at a distance because the large x-height results in large counters. However, too large x-height can lead to the misrecognition of letters. The x-height should be optimised to get a right balance between the ascender and the counter size keeping in mind the deterioration caused by rounding and irradiation.

  • The impact of x-height ceases to exist width of the letter is small. Hence these two factors should be considered in tandem.

  • In the case of letters with two horizontal strokes (o,z,b,d,p,q) large x-height does not affect the legibility much.

  • Use of large x-height in some cases might lead to misrecognition among the letters if the x-height overpowers the ascenders height (see image ), which usually get suppressed by rounding at the edges because of irradiation thereby decreasing the legibility.

  • Ascenders play a huge role in letter recognition as compared to descenders.

  • x-height does not help if the counters are narrow and strokes merge into each other when viewed at an angle.

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Last updated 3 years ago

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