3

I'm developing an app of Chinese. I have to tell the artist the font name to design images, so what's the real name of "System Font"?

3 Answers 3

16

Heiti SC (STHeitiSC-Light, STHeitiSC-Medium) for simplified chinese and Heiti TC (STHeitiTC-Light, STHeitiTC-Medium) for traditional chinese

Actually you can tell the artist to use whatever fonts he want, you can embed it in your app with the appropriate license

[Edit] Starting from iOS 9

For Hong Kong:
PingFangHK-Ultralight PingFangHK-Thin PingFangHK-Light PingFangHK-Regular PingFangHK-Medium PingFangHK-Semibold

For Trad Chinese:
PingFangTC-Ultralight PingFangTC-Thin PingFangTC-Light PingFangTC-Regular PingFangTC-Medium PingFangTC-Semibold

For Sim. Chinese:
PingFangSC-Ultralight PingFangSC-Thin PingFangSC-Light PingFangSC-Regular PingFangSC-Medium PingFangSC-Semibold

1
  • But the ttf file is too large, more than 10M. So we want to use the font apple supplies. Thank you. Commented Mar 29, 2012 at 8:02
0

I have internationalized word learning apps in 8 languages, for 8 languages, on iOS, which grew out of my own need for a tool to learn Chinese characters. I now have a "bi-lingual picture book" (using UIpageViewController) that shows any combination of two languages, using the phone's language as default.

I have settled on using the "system font" on iOS as others gave me warnings and errors during compile -- but now that I am building the picture book in xocde 4.5.2, i think i will try again and use Heiti SC for Chinese.

The "system font" is pretty ugly in Chinese; Heiti SC is great for simplified. But when i switch my iOS devices to "Chinese" as the default / system language, the font remains the same as the ugly one i get (for CHinese) in English.

I have not heard that the default System font is different on devices sold by country of origin; so if you want Heiti SC in your app, it seems you will need to designate it.

I could attach screen shots, but you can just switch your device's international settings-> language to Chinese to see.

-5

I believe that it's Simplified Chinese.

1
  • Tim, Traditional and Simplified are the classification of the two types of Chinese character sets - think of it like as the names of two different alphabets, like a Cyrillic and Greek alphabets. Different Chinese fonts may support either or both of the Chinese "alphabets". iOS, as of this time, only supports 1 font (STHeitiSC) in both Light and Medium strokes, but the font supports both character sets.
    – pdwalker
    Commented Aug 5, 2013 at 6:44

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.