Songti is a Chinese font that seems suitable for printing. The strokes vary in thickness, generally thin and vertical, with decorative parts at both ends (that is, "feet" or "serif"), and strokes such as dots, strokes, strokes and hooks have sharp points, which belong to serif fonts and are often used for text typesetting of books, magazines and newspapers.
Regular script is also called regular script, real script and official script. It gradually evolved from official script, becoming more simplified and more horizontal and vertical. Ci Hai is interpreted as "square, straight and exemplary". This kind of Chinese character has the correct font and is a modern popular handwritten orthographic Chinese character.
Extended data:
The culture of Song Dynasty flourished and the printing industry developed greatly. Since the Southern Song Dynasty, similar printing fonts began to appear in printing workshops in Lin 'an and other places, and later people called them imitation song style. Literati in the Ming Dynasty sought after Song engraving, so seal engravers thickened the vertical lines and the end points of strokes to resist the abrasion of seal engraving, but they still called it Song. The so-called Song Style in modern times is basically shaped in this way.
Regular script is also the official name. There are 20 regular calligraphers and 18 regular calligraphers in the provincial history museum of New Tang Book. Regular script, as a formal name, is also called regular script player, who is in charge of calligraphy and writing, and is listed in the same institution because of the different specific division of labor. "Tongdian Official Twenty-two" records that the regular script writer is an outstanding official. There were no regular script players in Song Dynasty, only regular script.
References:
Song Ti-Baidu Encyclopedia
Regular script-Baidu encyclopedia