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Is Helvetica available in ttf format? If not, what might be some good alternatives? I would appreciate any links to download on ttf format, thanks!

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This is not a programming-related question. However, a simple Google search might lead you to fonts.com/FindFonts/… – 0xA3 May 22 '09 at 9:43
Not even remotely programming related, and easily solvable via Google. Vote to close. – mmc Oct 30 '09 at 1:12
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3 Answers

And, to complete the trifecta of answers, see also the Bitstream Vera Sans family: http://www.gnome.org/fonts/

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Of course Arial is without the doubt the bastard half brother of Helvetica - and is clearly distinguishable all 'specialists'. For a good history check http://www.ms-studio.com/articles.html or check out the fantastic doco 'Helvetica'.

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You can download Arial from the msttcorefonts project. According to Wikipedia:

Monotype's Arial, designed in 1982, while different from Helvetica in some few details, has identical character widths, and is indistinguishable by most non-specialists.

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Arial is NOT a good alternative to Helvetica. – jbrennan Oct 30 '09 at 1:16
Based on what? They look pretty much the same here. – TML Nov 3 '09 at 3:53
Arial only looks like Helvetica at 12pt and below. Above that it starts to look rubbish fast - even to people who couldn't tell you why. – Keith Feb 1 '10 at 12:03
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Out of morbid curiosity, I took a poll of 14 people in our office today. I gave them a piece of paper with the classic "The quick brown fox.." on it two times in 28 point font - once in Helvetica, once in Arial, each clearly labelled - printed via a Xerox Workcenter 5638. I then took that sheet away and gave them a sheet with it once in Helvetica and asked them which of the two fonts had been used. 3 of them said Arial, 4 of them said Helvetica, 7 of them were uncomfortable even guessing because they "pretty much look the same". Not scientific, I know, but something to think about. – TML Feb 4 '10 at 10:35
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