In , Microsoft chose Arial as one of its four core TrueType fonts for Windows 3.1 , positioning it as an alternative to the then-expensive Helvetica. This decision turned Arial into a "web-safe" standard, ensuring consistent rendering across almost all early personal computers. Evolution to Version 7.00
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In , Microsoft chose Arial as one of its four core TrueType fonts for Windows 3.1 , positioning it as an alternative to the then-expensive Helvetica. This decision turned Arial into a "web-safe" standard, ensuring consistent rendering across almost all early personal computers. Evolution to Version 7.00
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