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#1
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Is it possible to renew a ticket on oyster at a tube ticket machine and
pay with notes? On another note, I noticed a while ago that the P22 tube font has square commas, full stops, apostrophes etc instead of the tilted square 'diamond' like ones. Does anyone know why this is? -- message by Robin May, but you can call me Mr Smith. Hello. I'm one of those "roaring fascists of the left wing". Then and than are different words! |
#2
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![]() Is it possible to renew a ticket on oyster at a tube ticket machine and pay with notes? yeah, I think so. You wave your oyster at the machine, and can renew your ticket. Can use card or cash (not sure if you can use prepay stored on the oyeter itself) On another note, I noticed a while ago that the P22 tube font has square commas, full stops, apostrophes etc instead of the tilted square 'diamond' like ones. Does anyone know why this is? nope - sorry! |
#3
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"J. Public" wrote in message On another note, I noticed a while ago that the P22 tube font has
square commas, full stops, apostrophes etc instead of the tilted square 'diamond' like ones. Does anyone know why this is? nope - sorry! The P22 Johnston font is a representation of the original Johnston font for LT. That font *DID* have the punctuation as you've described. Take a look at St. Pauls station, and above the platform exits you'll see the square full stop. Likewise any older line diagrams along the line will represent this as well. |
#4
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#5
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Michael Gamer wrote:
Robin May wrote: On another note, I noticed a while ago that the P22 tube font has square commas, full stops, apostrophes etc instead of the tilted square 'diamond' like ones. Does anyone know why this is? The P22 Johnston font is a representation of the original Johnston font for LT. That font *DID* have the punctuation as you've described. Take a look at St. Pauls station, and above the platform exits you'll see the square full stop. Likewise any older line diagrams along the line will represent this as well. That's right. Johnston's original font (1916) was curiously inconsistent on this point (no pun intended). It had diamond points on i, j, ? and !, but square ones elsewhere (.: ![]() marks. New Johnston is more consistent, with diamond points and diamond-headed comma shapes used on all the above. There are other differences between the two fonts, the most visible being the larger curve to the lower-case L on the original font, and the unserifed figure 1, the latter still visible on bus route number blinds which still use the old font (actually the bus font of 1920). -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
#6
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Re my last post:
In case any of you are wondering why Edward Johnston's 1916 font included a smiley, it's your newsreader trying to be clever. If your screen has It had diamond points on i, j, ? and !, but square ones elsewhere (.:smiley, it should read It had diamond points on i, j, ? and !, but square ones elsewhere (full stop, colon, semi-colon), Doh! -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
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