Glifo
La representación visual individual de un carácter; un mismo carácter puede tener múltiples glifos (p. ej., la 'a' en redonda e itálica).
A glyph is the fundamental unit of visual representation in typography — a single specific visual form used to represent a character or combination of characters. The distinction between a character and a glyph is subtle but important: a character is an abstract concept (the letter 'a'), while a glyph is its concrete visual realization.
One character can have multiple glyphs within a single font. The lowercase 'a' is a perfect example: most fonts contain both a single-story 'a' (a simple circle with a stem, as you'd write by hand) and a double-story 'a' (with the enclosed bowl and hook above, as seen in most upright text). Regular weight Inter uses the double-story 'a' in roman text but may switch to a single-story 'a' in italic. Similarly, a numeral '1' might have multiple glyphs — oldstyle, lining, tabular, or proportional.
/* Access alternate glyphs through font-variant or font-feature-settings */
.oldstyle-numerals {
font-family: 'EB Garamond', serif;
font-variant-numeric: oldstyle-nums;
/* Uses alternate numeral glyphs that sit on the baseline with descenders */
}
.tabular-numerals {
font-family: 'Inter', sans-serif;
font-variant-numeric: tabular-nums;
/* All digits use the same width — essential for financial tables */
}
/* Access a font's stylistic alternate glyphs */
.stylistic-alternates {
font-feature-settings: "ss01" 1; /* Stylistic Set 01 — font-specific */
}
A typeface's glyph coverage — how many glyphs it contains — determines which languages and scripts it can render. A font with full Latin coverage might have 256 glyphs. A comprehensive multilingual font like Noto Sans has tens of thousands, covering virtually every Unicode script. For internationalized web applications, glyph coverage is a critical selection criterion.
When working with Google Fonts, the unicode-range CSS descriptor lets browsers download only the subset of glyphs your content actually uses, keeping network payloads minimal even when using large comprehensive font files.
Related Terms
Fonts That Illustrate This Concept
Learn More
Learn the building blocks of typography — from baselines and x-heights to stems, bowls, and terminals. Understanding type anatomy helps you choose better fonts.
Typography FundamentalsUnlock hidden font features — ligatures, small caps, tabular numbers, stylistic alternates, and more. Most fonts have capabilities you've never used.