shirabe.org
Meaning
  1. 1
    English · JMdict
    printing pica
  2. 2
    English · Wikipedia

    The pica is a typographic unit of measure corresponding to approximately  1⁄72 of a foot, or  1⁄6 of an inch. Actually a new English pica was in 1886 defined as .1660 of an inch. This measure was based on the meter: 166 Nonparel equals 35 centimeters. The pica contains 12 point units of measure (.1660 inch). The first point-system was designed in 1737 by Pierre Simon Fournier le Jeune (1712–1768). The basis was the Paris foot: 1 foot = 12 thumbs, 1 thumb = 12 stripes, 1 stripe = 6 points. Around 1780 François-Ambroise "L'éclat" Didot (1730–1804) changed the typographic measures system. Now the larger French King's Foot was taken as the basis. Thus, point Didot equals .1776 inch. The traditional names for the sizes like cicéro, Petit-Roman, and Gros-Text were replaced by "ten-point", "twelve-point", etc. From that time all work printed for the French Court or French Government had to be printed in this new measurement. As a result this system was accepted more and more. Until the end of commercial letterpress, around 1970, there were still printers using the old Fournier sizes. Monotype moulds Fournier-sized were also available. Because 12-point Fourniers equals 11 point Didot, the Fournier system was wrongly referred to as the "Median system". The old English pica was defined as .1667". Monotype made wedges based on both pica systems. On the European continent the wedges were based on the old pica, and the wedges were marked with an extra E. The tables in English manuals differed subsequently from the tables found in the French, German, and Dutch manuals. To date, in printing these three pica measures are used: \n* The French pica of 12 Didot points (also called cicéro) generally is: 12 × 0.376 = 4.512 mm (0.1776 in). \n* The American pica measure of 0.013837 ft. ( 1⁄72.27 ft). Thus, a pica is 0.166044 in. (4.2175 mm) \n* The contemporary computer pica is  1⁄72 of the International foot of 1959, i.e. 4.233 mm or 0.166 in. Note that these definitions are different from a typewriter's pica setting, which denotes a type size of ten characters per horizontal inch. Usually, pica measurements are represented with an upper-case "P" with an upper-right-to-lower-left virgule (slash) starting in the upper right portion of the "P" and ending at the lower left of the upright portion of the "P"; essentially drawing a virgule ( / ) through a "P". (P̸) Likewise, points are represented with number of points before a lower-case "p", for example, 5p represents "5 points", and 6P̸2p represents "6 picas and 2 points", and 1P̸1 represents "13 points", which is converted to a mixed fraction of 1 pica and 1 point. Publishing applications such as Adobe InDesign and QuarkXPress represent pica measurements with whole-number picas left of a lower-case "p", followed by the points number, for example: 5p6, represents 5 picas and 6 points, or 5½ picas. Cascading Style Sheets defined by the World Wide Web Consortium use "pc" as the abbreviation for pica (1/6 of an inch), and "pt" for point (1/72 of an inch).

    Read full article on Wikipedia · CC-BY-SA

Save this word to start reviewing it with spaced repetition. Save word

Grammar codex

What the coloured tags mean

Hiragana

ひらがな

The rounded, flowing kana. Hiragana writes native Japanese words, grammar endings, and anything without (or alongside) kanji — it's the first script you learn. Each character stands for one syllable.

Example

ねこ — cat