AF-LED7 Seg-dots2 was designed by Peter Cross and published by Fortune. AF-LED7 Seg-dots2 contains 1 style.
* For when you need the most realistic looking electronic display.
* See User Manuals
Main advantages:
– Spacing between characters does not change when entering a decimal point or colon between them.
– Custom characters can be produced by selecting any combination of segments to be displayed.
Low cost electronic displays have a fixed number of segments that can be turned on or off to represent different symbols. A digital watch would be the most common example.
Fonts typically available for depicting electronic displays are often in the artistic style of these common LED or LCD displays. They provide the look-and-feel, but fall short when technical accuracy is required. Failure to represent an accurate and consistent representation of the real thing can be a cringe-worthy experience for the product design and marketing team, or even the hobbyist for that matter.
To solve this problem, Fortune Fonts has released a range of fonts that accurately depict the displays typically found on low cost electronic devices: watches, answering machines, car stereos, alarm clocks, microwaves and toys. These fonts come with numbers, letters and symbols predefined. However, they also allow you to create your own segment combinations for the custom symbols you need.
When producing manuals, marketing material and user interfaces, accuracy is an all-or-nothing concept.
Instructions in the user manual describe how to turn these fonts into realistic displays according to your own design, in the manner of the images above.
myFonts cannot offer you a license to use this font in the situation where you are going to use this font to design a physical item (e.g. electronic display). However, such a license can be purchased from here.