Sans Normal Ongir 4 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to 'Generisch Mono' by Akufadhl (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: coding, ui labels, terminal, tables, data display, utilitarian, technical, modern, no-nonsense, neutral, clarity, alignment, utility, technical readability, geometric, boxy, sturdy, crisp, unadorned.
A clean, monospaced sans with sturdy, even strokes and simplified, geometric construction. Curves are rounded but controlled, while many terminals resolve into flat, squared cuts, producing a crisp, engineered feel. Uppercase forms are compact and straight-sided (notably in E/F/H/I/L/T), while round letters like C/O/Q stay broadly circular with open counters and consistent stroke weight. Lowercase is straightforward and highly legible, with a single-storey “a” and “g,” a short-armed “r,” and minimal modulation throughout; the figures are similarly plain and robust, with open shapes and clear differentiation.
Well-suited to code editors, terminal-style interfaces, and any layout where strict character alignment matters, such as tables, logs, and data readouts. It also works for compact UI labels and technical documentation where a steady, predictable typographic rhythm supports scanning and parsing.
The overall tone is practical and tool-like, leaning toward a technical or coding aesthetic rather than editorial warmth. Its steady rhythm and uniform spacing read as systematic and dependable, with a contemporary, workmanlike voice.
The design appears intended to provide a neutral, highly legible monospaced voice with a modern geometric backbone, prioritizing consistency, alignment, and clarity for technical and structured text settings.
The monospaced spacing creates a regular grid-like cadence in text, reinforcing a structured, mechanical texture. Punctuation and basic symbols shown in the sample maintain the same blunt, functional character, keeping emphasis on clarity over personality.