Help:Fonts

Users are able to select the font that they use to produce and view Wikisource content.

Viewing Wikisource
By default Wikisource uses whichever sans-serif font your web browser specifies.

There are also several ways to choose fonts for display. Certain templates may override these selections, which means you should be extremely careful when settings fonts, as the user may have chosen their own font for accessibility reasons.

Browser settings
By setting your browser font, you can change the main font used at all websites, including Wikisource.


 * Firefox
 * Google Chrome
 * Microsoft Edge

Display options
In the  sidebar menu, there is a selector for "serif" or "sans-serif" fonts. This setting will persist across page loads.

This will have no effect if you have set a specific font using the UniversalLanguageSelector menu (see below).

UniversalLanguageSelector
Wikisource uses the Extension:UniversalLanguageSelector extension to enable users to set their font preferences for the entire site, including the menus and other user interfaces.

Overall site font
This setting sets the overall site font.



The available options are focussed on accessibility:


 * The system font (see above)
 * Open Dyslexic
 * ComicNeue

Choosing "download fonts when needed" will allow ULS to deliver suitable fonts for your selection above, as well as non-Latin fonts for other languages at Wikisource, for example Greek.

Per-language fonts
ULS will attempt to load a suitable font for other languages, such as Ancient Greek or Arabic, when no local suitable font is found, as needed, as long as the "download fonts when needed" setting is enabled.

It's theoretically possible to set a user preference for each of these languages from a list of supported options in ULS. However, this is quite fiddly to actually do, pending T289777.

User CSS
You can also customise your fonts on an extremely granular basis using your common.css file.

For example, you can set fonts on a per-language basis. Below, the CSS uses the first font found in the list to display Ancient Greek:

Only you will see the effect of this CSS.

Editing Wikisource
Most works on Wikisource do not specify an exact font to use. The font used is left to the user to configure (as above, or otherwise, for example on an e-reader). This is important for accessibility reasons, as not all fonts are as readable for everyone, and different reading environments may have different needs (e.g. on the web, on paper or on an e-reader).

In particular, Wikisource does not seek to force all texts to be be in the same or similar fonts to how they were published.

A very limited amount of font manipulation is permitted where such a thing doesn't impact readability and provides added value to the work or helps distinguish content where such distinction was made in the original work. It is extremely unusual for entire blocks of text to be set in a specific font.


 * serif is sometimes used in book title pages
 * monospace is something used in technical works reproducing computer code. Note: it is generally not used when the whole work is typewritten - in that case, no font should be set.
 * cursive can be used to indicate handwritten or small amounts of cursive type (sometimes used for image captions).