Eight-segment display

Eight-segment display of the Sharp EL-8

An eight-segment display is a type of display based on eight segments that can be turned on or off according to the font pattern to be produced.

Applications

One application was in the Sharp EL-8, an early electronic calculator. The eight-segment display produces more rounded digits than a seven-segment display, yielding a more "script-like" output, with the trade-off that fewer possible alphabetic characters can be displayed because the bars F and G are merged (see table below).

Displaying

An eight segment display can sometimes display alphabetic characters with less readability because the segments F and G are combined and the corners are rounded. The asymmetrical layout of the elements produced a distinctive "handwritten" digit style, with a half-height "0".

Examples

See also

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Eight-segment display, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.