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Small caps

In typography, small caps (short for small capitals) are uppercase (capital) characters that are printed in a smaller size than normal uppercase characters of the same font. Typically, the height an a small capital will be 1 ex, the same height as most lowercase characters in the font.


Many word processors and text formatting systems include an option to format text in caps and small caps; this leaves uppercase letters as they are but converts lowercase letters to small caps.

Small caps are used for text that is all uppercase (especially acronyms and other initialisms, such as "AIDS" and "B.C."); this makes the run of capital letters seem less "jarring " to the reader. Some publishers, such as Newsweek and DC Comics, use small caps to refer to the name of their own publications inside the same or another publication.

The text of a formal monumental inscription or the legend on a coin are often rendered in small caps: "Sir Christopher Wren's tomb in the St Paul's that he designed reads simply si monumentum requiris circumspice."

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