Sans Superellipse Etdil 7 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: code ui, data tables, labels, console text, technical docs, technical, retro, utilitarian, brisk, no-nonsense, systematic clarity, space efficiency, interface utility, emphasis slant, slanted, round corners, boxy, compact, industrial.
A slanted sans with a compact, monoline construction and rounded-rectangle geometry throughout. Curves tend to resolve into squarish bowls and softened corners rather than perfect circles, giving letters a superelliptical, engineered feel. Strokes terminate cleanly with minimal modulation, and counters stay relatively tight, producing a dense, efficient texture. The numerals and capitals read sturdy and uniform, while the lowercase follows the same squared-round logic with clear, simplified forms that preserve legibility at small sizes.
Well suited to interfaces and environments where aligned characters matter, such as code editors, terminals, dashboards, and tabular data. It also works for compact technical documentation, labeling, and system-style UI copy where a crisp, disciplined texture is desirable.
The overall tone is pragmatic and machine-like, with a subtle retro-computing flavor. The forward slant adds momentum and urgency without becoming expressive or calligraphic. It feels functional and systematic, suited to information-first design.
The design appears intended to combine the orderliness of fixed-width typography with a modernized, rounded-rectangular skeleton. The italic slant suggests it was drawn to provide emphasis or motion while retaining a strict, engineered structure and strong consistency across the set.
The rhythm is highly regular, with consistent character footprints that support tabular alignment and predictable spacing. Distinctive squarish rounds (notably in O/C/G and the bowls of b/d/p/q) help the face maintain a cohesive, modular look in continuous text.