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Ladies and gentlemen, what you are about to read is a complete list of all 63 typefaces on the Indian rupee note. Now, I am not making this up! You will not believe how many different typefaces there are. The word(s) in bold are the Hindi translations. The total number of characters on the note not including the "कर्नाटक" is 62. The 62nd character is an uppercase "F". The 63rd character is a tilde which you will see on the taka note. All takas are printed in this same typeface. On all notes written in Urdu, Arabic numerals were replaced with Devanagari numerals, thus maintaining consistency within the family of languages used on rupee notes. What follows is a table of the "सहायक क्रेडी" साह्ना (supported characters) in all 63 typefaces. As to the question of why anyone would want to see this list, may I present to you three reasons. The first is because it shows how much effort was put into making the notes harder to forge. The second reason is because I like pop culture references and this is sort of like making a pop culture reference (note that "Hum Rahein Ya Na Rahe Kal" actually means nothing). And the third reason is that you might actually find this interesting. The following tables include the supported characters of each typeface.Note: The following Rupee banknotes are not included in the current incarnation of the note because they don't exist. As these notes were printed before independence, they are printed using Latin script instead of Devanagari. They were removed from circulation because their values (20, 50 and 100) were not used after independence (the 1, 5 and 10 rupees notes assumed their role)The following table shows all the supported characters of type 1 (प्रथम क्रेडी). The arrangement of these characters are as follows.Note : This typeface is also used on the 10 Rupee note. The 1 Rupee note has a different look, with slightly smaller letters and other subtle differences. But it is based on the same typeface. The 10 Rupee notes were printed using this typeface, instead of the one used for other notes printed later (for example 50 Rupees). However, I don't know why they chose to do this or if there were any other differences besides the size of the text. The size of the text on 10 rupee notes can be compared easily with 5 rupee notes because they're both the same size (and contain very similar text). cfa1e77820
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