San Francisco (also known as SF Pro) is a neo-grotesquetypeface made by Apple Inc. It was first released to developers on November 18, 2014.[1][2] It is the first new typeface designed at Apple in nearly twenty years and has been inspired by Helvetica and DIN.[1]
The macOS Catalina font Galvji is similar to the San Francisco variant SF Pro Text but has lower leading and bigger spacing.
Variants
Name
Type
Introduced
Common Usage
SF Pro/SF UI
Normal
2015
System font for Apple software
SF Condensed (Derived from SF Pro)
Condensed
2016
Apple News, Stocks, Maps, Apple Cash
SF Compressed (Derived from SF Pro)
Compressed
2020
Apple News, Photos, Clips
SF Expanded (Derived from SF Pro)
Expanded
2021
Maps, Photos
SF Compact
Compact
2015
watchOS, Photos, product text, keyboards
SF Mono
Monospaced
2016
Monospaced body text in software such as Terminal, Console, and Xcode
SF Camera
Regular
2019
Camera
SF has the codename SFNS in macOS and SFUI in iOS, regardless of the official name.
Stylistic fonts exist, which are mainly present in the iOS 16 Lock Screen, Apple Cash, watchOS Watch Faces, and several promotional materials. These include chiseled, stenciled, semi-rounded, dotted, prisma, railed, and slab-serif versions.
Some variants have two optical sizes: "display" for large and "text" for small text. The letters in the "text" size have larger apertures and more generous letter-spacing than in the "display" size. The operating system automatically chooses the "display" size for sizes of at least 20 points and the "text" size for smaller size.[3][4] Variable grades were eventually added in newer versions.
SF Pro/SF UI
UI font for macOS, iOS, iPadOS, and tvOS. In 2017, a revised version, SF Pro was introduced, supporting an expanded list of weights, optical sizes, glyphs and languages.[5]SF Pro Text and SF Pro Display come in nine weights (the Text version had only six weights when introduced) plus corresponding italics. SF Pro Rounded (codename SFUIRounded), which comes in the same nine weights and has the same figure as the "Display" version but with rounded corners, was introduced in 2018.
These fonts, for use in different languages, can be found on the Apple website in their corresponding regions of use as variations of SF Pro:
SF Pro AR, and SF Pro TH are fonts for Arabic,[6] and Thai scripts respectively.
SF Pro SC, SF Pro TC and SF Pro HK are Chinese fonts; they are labeled as the PingFang family.
SF Pro JP is Japanese font; it is labeled as the AXIS Std family.
SF Pro KR is Korean font; it is labeled as the Sandoll GothicNeo1 family.
SF Pro is a variable font that also has variable widths in conjunction with weights, optical sizes, and grades. One of them is a print-optimized variant, SF Hello, which is restricted to Apple employees and permitted contractors and vendors, and is therefore unavailable for public use.[7] This allows for additional fonts derived from SF Pro as shown below.
SF Condensed
A condensed variant of SF Pro. SF Condensed Text has six weights, while SF Condensed Display has nine. Variants are internally named SF Cash, SF Shields, and SF Condensed Photos.
SF Compressed
A compressed variant of SF Pro. Vertical edges are fully straight and kerning is much closer, unlike in SF Condensed.
SF Expanded
Internally called SF Wide, it is an extended/widened variant of SF Pro.
SF Compact
The initial version introduced with the Apple Watch and watchOS, later rebranded as SF Compact with the introduction of SF UI at WWDC 2015. Its characters' round curves are flatter than those of SF Pro, allowing the letters to be laid out with more space between them, thereby making the text more legible at small sizes, which the Apple Watch's small screen demands.[3] SF Compact Rounded was introduced in 2016.
Like SF Pro after it, SF Compact comes in Text and Display optical sizes as well as a Rounded version with the same figure as the "Display" version but with rounded corners. All three versions each come in the same nine weights as SF Pro (the Text version had only six when introduced), and likewise only the "Text" and "Display" versions have corresponding italics.
SF Mono
A monospaced variant. UI font for the Terminal, Console, and Xcode applications.[8] It was introduced at WWDC 2016.[9] SF Mono comes in six weights with corresponding italics.
SF Camera
Introduced on September 10, 2019 at Apple's keynote; Phil Schiller mentioned it while summarizing the camera updates on iPhone 11 Pro. This variant has a boxier design than SF Pro, giving it an industrial and professional look. Its figure and tracking are similar to SF Compact Text.
A serif variant. It was introduced as SF Serif (codename Serif UI) at WWDC 2018 as the UI font for the redesigned Apple Books app for IOS 12.[10] It was officially released under the name New York on the Apple Developer site on June 3, 2019.[11] The typeface comes in Small, Medium, Large and Extra Large sizes, each in six weights and corresponding italics. It also includes OpenType features for lining and old-style figures in both proportional and tabular widths.
This typeface differs from, and is not related to, Apple's older font with the same name with the bitmap format for the original Macintosh (and later converted to TrueType format).
Variable fonts
Apple introduced the OpenType Font Variations feature of their SF fonts in WWDC20.[12] It is included as a TrueType Font in the installer file on the Developer website. On WWDC22, variable width option is introduced to the font family.
SF Pro feature variable weights, variable widths, and variable optical sizes of between "text" and "display".
SF Pro Italic, and SF Compact feature variable weights and variable optical sizes of between "text" and "display".
SF Compact Italic features variable weights but has "text" optical size only.
New York and New York Italic feature variable weights and variable optical sizes between "small" and "extra large".
SF Symbols
SF Symbols refers to symbols and icons used in the Apple operating systems. To fit Apple's objectives of core functionality and ease of use, these symbols are designed using Apple's visual language and unified design elements. They also include the squircle instead of standard rounded corners for a more comfortable look, similar to what Apple has used in their other designs. By using unified symbols, users can experience the easiness and intuitiveness when interacting between Apple's devices, services, and apps.
Apple's symbols are included as glyphs in the font file of SF Pro, SF Pro Rounded, SF Compact, and SF Compact Rounded (also in their variable font file). Each symbol is available in 3 sizes. These symbols change their thickness and negative space according to chosen weight, they even utilized with the Opentype Variation feature. Using the SF Symbols app can access more features such as refined alignment, multicolor, and localization of symbols.[13] The symbol properties are not unified across variants. Different Unicode arrangement for some symbols result in different symbols when switching between variants, and some symbols have noticeably fewer details in some variants.version 16.0d18e1
These symbols are available for developers to use in their apps on Apple platforms only. Developers are allowed to customize it to desired styles and colors, but certain symbols may not be modified and may only be used to refer to its respective Apple services or devices as listed in the license description.
Apple restricts the usage of the typeface by others. It is licensed to registered third-party developers only for the design and development of applications for Apple's platforms.[11] Only SF Pro, SF Compact, SF Mono, SF Arabic, SF Hebrew and New York variants are available for download on Developer website and they are the only SF variants allowed to be used by developers.
The San Francisco Chronicle described the font as having nothing to do with the city and just being "Helvetica on a low-carb diet".[19]