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nonligature

Nonligature is a typography term referring to the absence of ligatures—glyphs that combine two or more letters into a single character. In nonligature text, consecutive letters are drawn as separate glyphs. Ligatures have historical origins in Latin script to address typesetting constraints and to improve visual harmony; in modern typography they are implemented as font features that can be enabled or disabled.

Control of ligatures occurs at both font and software levels. In OpenType fonts, ligatures are defined by

Use of nonligature is common in certain contexts. In body text, many fonts balance readability with aesthetic

Examples of ligatures frequently discussed in typography include fi, fl, ffi, and ffl. In addition, Unicode includes

features
such
as
liga
(standard
ligatures),
dlig
(discretionary
ligatures),
and
hlig
(historic
ligatures).
Nonligature
is
achieved
by
disabling
these
features.
In
CSS,
you
can
disable
ligatures
with
font-variant-ligatures:
none
or
with
font-feature-settings:
"liga"
0,
among
other
controls.
ligatures,
but
in
technical
writing
or
programming,
nonligature
fonts
are
often
preferred
to
ensure
consistent
character
spacing
and
avoid
any
potential
confusion.
Some
designers
maintain
optional
ligature
support
in
headings
or
display
text
for
stylistic
reasons.
dedicated
ligature
code
points—for
example,
U+FB01
for
fi,
U+FB02
for
fl,
U+FB03
for
ffi,
and
U+FB04
for
ffl—used
in
specific
fonts
or
contexts,
though
most
modern
typesetting
forms
ligatures
within
the
font
rather
than
relying
on
precomposed
characters.
Nonligature,
therefore,
emphasizes
separate
letterforms
rather
than
joined
glyphs.