May. 5th, 2001 09:22 am
HTML Advice
OK, here I am, spouting about one of the few things I actually am an expert on for a change.
When you design your websites, or your LJ styles, here's a very important thing to remember. Ready? OK, here we go...
Do not hard-code a specific point-size for your fonts.
Do you know how terribly annoying it is to change the font size setting and see no change? Maybe 8-point Arial Narrow is readable on your monitor, but I don't run at 640x480, so 8-point fonts are TINY. The HTML standards include standard sizes, such as 1, 2, 3 or even relative sizes, such as +1 or -3. Please use them. Those folks running in a high resolution, as well as people with worse eyesight, will be very grateful.
Otherwise, I end up with two options: squint at the microscopic font, or discard all server font info and run every page in my fonts. Well, I LIKE other folks' typography, just not itty-bitty fonts. Go look at some HTML primers, and stop using "8-point" as a font size.
/rant off
When you design your websites, or your LJ styles, here's a very important thing to remember. Ready? OK, here we go...
Do not hard-code a specific point-size for your fonts.
Do you know how terribly annoying it is to change the font size setting and see no change? Maybe 8-point Arial Narrow is readable on your monitor, but I don't run at 640x480, so 8-point fonts are TINY. The HTML standards include standard sizes, such as 1, 2, 3 or even relative sizes, such as +1 or -3. Please use them. Those folks running in a high resolution, as well as people with worse eyesight, will be very grateful.
Otherwise, I end up with two options: squint at the microscopic font, or discard all server font info and run every page in my fonts. Well, I LIKE other folks' typography, just not itty-bitty fonts. Go look at some HTML primers, and stop using "8-point" as a font size.
/rant off
no subject
Heh