Numbers are also capitalized like letters, but when used?

Actually, they exist! Most of the numbers we use today are capital letters (also known as modern numbers or "upright" numbers), but perhaps you have encountered the "regular" version somewhere in life. without realizing it.

This is an example of an American penny that any of the people in this country have a few coins in their wallets.

Picture 1 of Numbers are also capitalized like letters, but when used?
American penny.

Notice how the numbers are not aligned in the upper and lower lines? This is a better way to show you, by comparing common or "ancient " numbers with flower or "modern" digits .

Picture 2 of Numbers are also capitalized like letters, but when used?
Above is capitalization, bottom is not.

Both of these sets of digits are the same font, but very few people know how to use them in any case . or even including writing classical numbers (or lower numbers) like how to be right

For more than 500 years after the Arabic numerals overthrew the Roman numeral system (I, II, III .), numbers were often the only systems that existed. The type of uppercase we use today is only introduced at the end of the 18th century.

In fact, it was in the early years of the phototypesetting that almost destroyed the common digits when electronic fonts only preferred modern flower numerals. Luckily, it has appeared in recent years a re-use of Arabic numerals with its full-blown version.

So when do you use capital letters modern and when do you use lower-case letters?

According to the feature, the ancient digits look best when they appear in a paragraph (such as a book or magazine). Flower numbers tend to slightly cut the reader's circuit.

On the other hand, when used in a special text with all uppercase letters, the digits will often be extremely out of place there. You will see both examples below.

Picture 3 of Numbers are also capitalized like letters, but when used?
When used in a special paragraph with all uppercase letters, the digits will often be extremely out of place there.

Note that the all-caps title (all uppercase letters) looks a lot more standard with the upper-case flower number than the second paragraph.

The opposite of the body of each paragraph, when the upper-case flower number is as high as uppercase, causes visual disruption, while with the lower digits in the second paragraph makes the reader's eyes feel a little more pleasant

The upper-case digits also match the lists more, partly because they are right next to the capital letters.

Picture 4 of Numbers are also capitalized like letters, but when used?
The flower digit also matches the list.

So how do you write a lower digit?

Most people probably won't care much about the type of digits they write. Sometimes, the digit font they choose does not include the usual digit system.

However, if flower discrimination is often something important to you (if you are an author planning to pursue self-publishing for example), choose the font that includes the regular, following digits. that accesses them through palettes such as Character or Glyphs in programs that support it (like InDesign or Quark XPress).

The difference looks subtle, but you will feel the reward for that effort by bringing great comfort to your readers.