Slashed letter O, unslashed letter zero
Diane Bruce
db at db.net
Wed Apr 27 14:38:38 CDT 2022
On Tue, Apr 26, 2022 at 07:48:36PM -0700, Chuck Guzis via cctalk wrote:
> On 4/26/22 19:05, Fred Cisin via cctalk wrote:
> > I remember about 30 years ago, a registration card for a Microsoft
> > product had specific forms that they wanted for certain letters, for the
> > sake of a slightly inadequate handwriting recognition program. Among
> > those was "ticked letter O". A round 'O", with an extra mark on the
> > upper right. Like a slashed zero, with the slash going from upper right,
> > but stopping before the center of the character. Or like an inverted 'Q'
> > At the time, I thought that that surely would increase confusion between
> > zero, letter 'O' and letter 'Q'.
>
> All of that could have been avoided had we all adopted OCR-A
> (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OCR-A)
About 40 years ago I was with a group doing OCR. I still laugh at the pretentious
name of the paper the Engineer had written. (Dendritic analysis) I kept
thinking of teeth. (Pair of PDP-11/23 + single line 1024 bit CCD reader for the curious.)
OCR-B is a little kinder on the eyes you must admit. Courier font resulted
in so much bad OCR...
>
> CDC actually adopted OCR-A as their official internal font. My office
> typewriter (Olivetti) had such a font. I hated it.
>
Yes it is a horrible font!
> Finally, I managed to snag an IBM Model D Executive when one of the
> departments shuffled off to Minnesota. ("Appropriating" equipment when
> departments moved or projects shut down was a favorite hobby. All such
> equipment never left the facility, so I wasn't really doing anything
> wrong, but confusing the bean counters). I had the best-looking office
> memos bar none.
>
> OCR-B was a bit less offensive, but the difference between capital oh
> and zero was less apparent.
Yes. Now try Courier ;)
>
> --Chuck
>
-- Diane
--
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