Sans Superellipse Haluf 9 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font visually similar to '403 Mono' by 403TF and 'Rational TW' by René Bieder (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: ui labels, code, terminals, dashboards, data tables, technical, utilitarian, modern, clean, neutral, clarity, alignment, system feel, legibility, robustness, square-rounded, even rhythm, plain, mechanical, high legibility.
A square-shouldered sans with rounded corners and broadly superelliptical curves. Strokes are uniform and sturdy, with generous interior counters and simple, open apertures that keep letters clear at a glance. The overall rhythm is steady and grid-friendly, with consistent widths and straightforward construction across capitals, lowercase, and figures. Terminals tend to be flat and crisp rather than tapered, reinforcing the font’s engineered, no-nonsense texture.
Well suited to interface typography where alignment and repeatability matter—navigation, settings panels, status displays, and compact labeling. It also fits code and terminal-style environments, as well as dashboards, tables, and other data-heavy layouts where consistent character widths help scanning.
The tone is pragmatic and contemporary, reading as functional rather than expressive. Its rounded geometry softens the mechanical structure, giving it an approachable “terminal/console” feel without becoming playful or decorative.
The design appears intended for structured, system-like typography: a clear, robust sans that prioritizes regular spacing, legibility, and a stable rectangular silhouette. The rounded-square forms suggest an effort to balance strict grid geometry with a slightly softer, more friendly finish.
Digits are bold and highly readable, matching the blocky, rounded-square logic of the letters for a consistent color on the page. In paragraph settings the texture stays even and calm, favoring clarity and predictability over calligraphic nuance.