Code variants With the rise of digital computing, variants of the Courier typeface were developed with features helpful in coding: larger punctuation marks, stronger distinctions between similar characters (such as the numeral
0 vs. the upper-case
O and the numeral
1 vs. the lower-case
L),
sans-serif variants, and other features to provide increased legibility when viewed on screens. Today, many Courier typefaces include a code version within the type family. Courier New Baltic, Courier New CE, Courier New Cyr, Courier New Greek, Courier New Tur are aliases created in the FontSubstitutes section of
WIN.INI. These entries all point to the master font. When an alias font is specified, the font's character map contains a different character set from the master font and the other alias fonts.
IBM Courier IBM made Courier freely available in PostScript Type 1 format. Known as
IBM Courier or simply
Courier, it is available under the IBM/MIT X Consortium Courier Typefont agreement. Among other IBM-specific characters it contains optionally a dotted zero (which seems to have originated as an option on
IBM 3270 display controllers) and a
slashed zero.
Courier 10 Pitch BT and Courier Code The Courier 10 Pitch BT typeface was released as a font by
Bitstream. Courier 10 BT is heavier than Courier New and more closely approximates the look of the original Courier type on paper. The freely available version, often seen as a system font on electronic devices, includes the 255 characters of the
ANSI character set in Type 1 format. Courier 10 BT has been donated to the
X Consortium by Bitstream (along with
Bitstream Charter) and is the default Courier font on most
Linux distributions. Expanded Pan-European (W1G) character sets are made available for license by Bitstream. Courier Code is a variant of Courier 10 Pitch BT for use in programming. The zero is dotted to better distinguish it from the capital
O and the lowercase
L has been altered to better distinguish it from the number one. The leading has been increased slightly as well.
Courier New Courier New appears as a system font on many electronic devices. This Courier variant was produced for electronic use by
Monotype. Its thin appearance when printed on paper owes to its being "digitized directly from the golf ball of the
IBM Selectric" without accounting for the visual weight normally added by the
typewriter's ink ribbon.
ClearType rendering technology includes a hack to make the font appear more legible on screens, though printouts retain the thin look. The font family includes Courier New, Courier New Bold, Courier New Italic, and Courier New Bold Italic. Courier New was introduced as a system font with
Windows 3.1, which also included
raster Courier fonts.
Courier Prime This Courier typeface, developed by Alan Dague-Greene with funding from
John August and Quote-Unquote Apps, includes a true Italic style. Courier Prime matches the metrics of Courier Final Draft, with some design changes and improvements aimed at greater legibility and beauty. The typeface was released in January 2013 under the SIL
Open Font License. In 2016 the family was extended with Sans Serif and Code versions. By mid-2018 the family included Semi-Bold and Medium versions (designed by
M. Babek Aliassa) and a
Cyrillic alphabet version (designed by Ivan Gladkikh). All fonts in the family are downloadable for free and can be used in any application.
Dark Courier Dark Courier is a normal-weight typeface rather than a semi-bold or bold as its name may imply. Dark Courier, developed as a
TrueType font by
HP, was one of the first fonts developed as a Courier New alternative for those who found that typeface too thin. produced a version of Courier called
Nimbus Mono L in 1984, and eventually released under the
GPL and
AFPL (as
Type 1 font for Ghostscript) in 1996. It is one of the
Ghostscript fonts, free alternatives to 35
core PostScript fonts, which include Courier. It is available in major
free and
open source operating systems. • Tex Gyre Cursor, developed by GUST ("the Polish TeX Users Group"), is based on the URW Nimbus Mono L typeface. •
FreeMono, a free font descending from URW++ Nimbus Mono L, which, in turn, descends from Courier. It is one of free fonts developed in GNU FreeFont project, first published in 2002. It is used in some free software as a Courier replacement or for Courier font substitution.
Fonts-TLWG Thai Linux Working Group publish several typefaces as
free and open-source software monospace. 4 of those typefaces contain Courier glyphs: TlwgMono, Tlwg Typewriter, Tlwg Typist and Tlwg Typo.
Courier Recast Designed by Reiko Hirai, Emanuela Conidi, and Jonny Pinhorn for
Dalton Maag, Courier Recast is available in nine weights with upright and italic styles, as well as in variable font format with axes for weight. ==Alternatives and derivatives==