Does anyone know what this is in the space glyph in the font window (FL5.2)? It looks like it says DEF to me. Seems to be in some fonts but not others.
The little hand tells you that the space is used as the PFM default character. When a glyph is not available in a font, it will be replace by the PFM default character. It’s better to use .notdef for that.
Note that the PFM default character applies only to PS Type 1 fonts. OpenType and TrueType fonts will automatically use the .notdef glyph, presuming it is Glyph ID 0 (zero) as specified.
Now it has been suggested, I cannot see it anymore else than a tiny pointing hand ...
Which indeed is properly called a "manicule" – thanks for that factoid. I'll make sure to name it as such in the future. (Another one is "pilcrow" for "¶".)
In the Optimality Theory in linguistics, the manicule gets used to point out (hur hur, I guess) which constraint is the best; see the example Tableau in https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optimality_Theory.
Optimality Theory likely increased the sales of dingbat fonts. Between manicules, eight-balls, flowers, and bombs (not to mention whatever else might have been added), it definitely created a market (albeit a rather small one)
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Which indeed is properly called a "manicule" – thanks for that factoid. I'll make sure to name it as such in the future. (Another one is "pilcrow" for "¶".)
In the Optimality Theory in linguistics, the manicule gets used to point out (hur hur, I guess) which constraint is the best; see the example Tableau in https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optimality_Theory.