A font is a style of typeface such as Helvetica or Courier.
Points describe the size of the font. The definition has changed but usually there are 72 points to the inch. This distance is often used to measure the approximate height of the font with room to spare. Typically the vertical distance from the top of a capital G to the bottom of a lower case g plus a small gap.
Points
well the fonts are measured in points
The unit of measurement is called "point". 72 points = 1 inch.
I think it stands for: Fonts Images Slogans Headings Collums Layout Underline Boxes Bullet Points
On a Mac, fonts are primarily stored in the Fonts folder located within the Library directory, specifically at /Library/Fonts, ~/Library/Fonts for user-specific fonts, and /System/Library/Fonts for system fonts. In Windows 95/98, fonts are typically found in the C:\Windows\Fonts directory. Both operating systems allow users to install additional fonts that can be accessed by applications.
The point is being the usual unit of measurement for the fonts used in computers. Point is the smallest unit of measure, being a subdivision of the larger pica. It is commonly abbreviated as pt. All computer fonts are measured according to height and width of points.
Yes, there are websites like Google Fonts and Adobe Fonts that allow you to use fonts directly on your website or project without downloading them.
C:\windows\fonts
You can't change fonts.
In some fonts, yes; in other fonts, no.
No, iPiccy does not allow users to add custom fonts to the platform. The fonts available in iPiccy are predetermined and users cannot upload or use additional fonts.
Scriptorium Fonts was created in 1992.