The one used for user-interface elements. With, Con, Mit Serif (useless Eddie Izzard Reference), for those that want the little decoration. Arial, Segoe UI and Tahoma are part of that family. SanSerif, so without the heavy bits that decorate a font. Monospaced, for example used to show snippets of code. And you have the following fonts you can use: It replaces the way font substitution is done in Win32. That said, WPF supports composite fonts, which are essentially virtual fonts that redirect each portion of Unicode (symbols, asian text, Greek text, Latin text, ASCII, you get the drill) to the correct font. This will show Segoe UI, followed by Verdana.
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