San Francisco (sans-serif typeface)

San Francisco is an American neo-grotesque sans-serif typeface made by Apple Inc. It was first released to developers on November 18, 2014.[1][2] It is the first new typeface designed at Apple in nearly 20 years and has been inspired by Helvetica and DIN.[1]

San Francisco
CategoryNeo-grotesque
FoundryApple Inc.
Date released2015
LicenseProprietary
VariationsSF, SF Compact, SF Mono
Websitehttps://developer.apple.com/fonts/

Variants

The San Francisco typeface has three main variants: SF , SF Pro and SF Pro Display for macOS, iOS, and iPadOS; SF Compact and SF Round for watchOS; and SF Mono for the Terminal, Console, and Xcode applications.[3][4] Several other variants exist for internal use by Apple.

San Francisco was first introduced in watchOS only. The next year at WWDC, Apple released the watchOS font as SF Compact and at the same time introduced SF UI (generally called SF) for OS X El Capitan and iOS 9. In macOS High Sierra and iOS 11, SF UI was succeeded by SF Pro.[5] Note: SF has the codename SFNS in macOS and SFUI in iOS, regardless the official name.

The main difference is that the sides of letters with round shapes, such as o, e, and s, are round in SF, whereas they are flat in SF Compact. The flat sides allow the letters to be laid out with more space between them, thereby making the text more legible at small sizes, which is particularly important for the Apple Watch.[6]

Both SF and SF Compact each have two optical sizes: "display" for large and "text" for small text. Compared to display, the letters in text have larger apertures and more generous letter-spacing. The operating system automatically chooses the display optical size for sizes of at least 20 points, and the text optical size otherwise.[6] Additionally, included in macOS Sierra and iOS 10 is a new variant named SF Compact Rounded. It is used in the new contact placeholder icons introduced in the OSes.

In iOS 12.2 beta, SF Pro Rounded (codename SFUIRounded) was found.[7] It was officially released on the Apple Developer website on June 3, 2019.

SF Mono, which is a monospaced variant, was introduced at WWDC 2016.[8] It is installed as default in Console (only regular weight), Terminal and Xcode. It was officially released on the Apple Developer website in August 2019.

The SF Serif (codename Serif UI) variant was showcased during the keynote at WWDC 2018 on June 4, 2018 when the all-new Apple Books app was introduced.[9] This variant was exclusive to Apple Books in iOS 12, as a result, it was not available for download. It was later released in four optical sizes with six weights each, under the name New York on June 3, 2019, on the Apple Developer site.[3] The font includes OpenType features for lining and old-style figures in both proportional and tabular widths. Despite Apple having a font with the same name with the bitmap format for the original Macintosh (and later converted to TrueType format), it is unrelated to this design.

The SF Hello variant was first introduced in 2016. It is restricted to Apple employees and permitted contractors and vendors, and is therefore not available for public use.[10][11] This variant appears to be an intermediate optical size between SF UI Text and SF UI Display; however, some characters are tweaked, and the letter-spacing is adjusted specially for printing rather than displaying on screen.

SF Cash can be found in the Apple Pay Cash app for iMessage. It includes a chiseled-style SVG color font titled "SF Cash Chiseled", a plain version titled "SF Cash Plain", and "SF Cash Text Condensed Semibold" which appears more condensed than "SF Pro Text Condensed Semibold".

SF Shields first appeared in iOS 12.1, and is hidden in the GeoServices cache folder. It is also found in macOS Mojave's GeoServices cache.

SF Camera was introduced on September 10, 2019 at Apple's keynote with the iPhone 11. SF Camera is the UI font for the Camera app on the iPhone 11 and the iPhone 11 Pro models. Phil Schiller mentioned it while explaining how much the camera updates are meaningful to Apple, and implied that it's that important to them that they created a new version of the font for it.

Usage

Since its introduction, San Francisco has gradually replaced most of Apple's other typefaces on their software and hardware products and for overall branding[12] and has replaced Lucida Grande and Helvetica Neue as the system typeface of macOS and iOS since OS X El Capitan and iOS 9.[13][3][14] Apple uses it on its website and for its product wordmarks, where it replaced Myriad Pro. It is also used on the keyboard of the 2015 MacBook and on the 2016 MacBook Pro, replacing VAG Rounded.[15] It is also used as Apple's corporate typeface.[16]

Apple restricts the usage of the typeface by others. It is licensed to registered third-party developers only for the design and development of applications for Apple's platforms.[3]

References

  1. Brownlee, John (November 19, 2014). "Apple Releases Its Most Important Typeface in 20 Years". Fast Company. Retrieved June 13, 2015.
  2. Williams, Owen (November 18, 2014). "Meet Apple's new font, designed for its smartwatch". The Next Web. Retrieved June 13, 2015.
  3. "Fonts". Apple Developer. Apple Inc. Retrieved June 13, 2015.
  4. Nowell, Peter. "Apple Reveals San Francisco Monospaced Font".
  5. "iOS 11 silently introduces SF Pro with almost 1000 new glyphs and support for more languages". Designer News. Retrieved April 21, 2019.
  6. Cavedoni, Antonio (June 12, 2015). "Introducing the New System Fonts". WWDC 2015. Apple Inc.
  7. Rambo, Guilherme (January 25, 2019). "New font on iOS 12.2: SFUIRoundedpic.twitter.com/chCQassrL5". @_inside. Retrieved April 21, 2019.
  8. Getting Apple's SF Mono Font in Mac OS, retrieved January 3, 2019
  9. "Apple Books: What's new in iOS 12". iMore. Retrieved July 10, 2018.
  10. San-Francisco-family/README.md at master · windyboy1704/San-Francisco-family, retrieved May 30, 2019
  11. Apple Identity Guidelines (PDF), retrieved January 2, 2019
  12. Apple (2015). "Visual Design - Apple TV Human Interface Guidelines - Apple Developer". Retrieved on 2015-10-04 from https://developer.apple.com/tvos/human-interface-guidelines/visual-design/.
  13. "Typography". Apple Watch Human Interface Guidelines. Apple Inc. Archived from the original on June 15, 2015. Retrieved June 13, 2015.
  14. Stinson, Liz (June 9, 2015). "Why Apple Abandoned the World's Most Beloved Typeface". Wired. Retrieved June 13, 2015.
  15. Wright, Mic (March 9, 2015). "The new MacBook shows San Francisco is more than just the Apple Watch font". The Next Web. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
  16. "Apple Adopts San Francisco Typeface for Apple.com Website". Retrieved April 21, 2018.
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