[WSG] more on fonts

2009-06-22 Thread Marvin Hunkin
hi.
well, the subject that i was taking, and the web page for pinciples of 
visual design, my professor, said i have to had fonts, in the style sheet.
that was the requirmenet of this site i was doing for a fruit shop.
cheers Marvin.
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Re: [WSG] more on fonts

2009-06-22 Thread Paul Novitski

At 6/22/2009 05:00 AM, Marvin Hunkin wrote:

hi.
well, the subject that i was taking, and the web page for pinciples of
visual design, my professor, said i have to had fonts, in the style sheet.
that was the requirmenet of this site i was doing for a fruit shop.



Just as a reality check, let me go over how this works.

You don't have to have any particular fonts on your own computer in 
order to designate them in a web page.


You create a web page on your computer, upload it to the server, and 
after that each visitor who sees the page downloads it to their 
computer where it is displayed (rendered). It is the fonts installed 
on each visitor's computer that determine how the text will be 
displayed on their screens.


If you specify font-families in the stylesheet, you're not DICTATING 
what font must appear, you're only SUGGESTING which fonts you'd like 
to appear. If a font you've requested isn't installed, it doesn't 
show up; that simple.


If you use the stylesheet to ask that some text be rendered in a very 
common font such as Arial, it will be displayed in Arial on the vast 
majority of visitors' computers. If you use a more unusual font, only 
a small number of visitors might have that font and see it on the 
page. Everyone else will see your 2nd or 3rd choice font for that text.


For example, if your stylesheet says:

h1
{
font-family: Gothic Rare, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;
}

...then the visitor's browser checks to see if it can find a match 
with any of the fonts in the list. Gothic Rare will not be found 
anywhere because I just made it up. Helvetica is far from universally 
installed, but Arial is extremely common so most people will see the 
text in Arial. If none of those three fonts is found, 'sans-serif' 
tells the browser to use whatever its default sans serif font is 
which might easily be different on every computer.


A sans serif font is a font with no serifs. See also:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sans_serif

Does that help clarify any of this?

Regards,

Paul
__

Paul Novitski
Juniper Webcraft Ltd.
http://juniperwebcraft.com 




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Re: [WSG] more on fonts

2009-06-22 Thread Susie Gardner-Brown
Don't see how it could be any clearer Paul ...

:)


On 23/06/09 8:39 AM, Paul Novitski p...@juniperwebcraft.com wrote:

 At 6/22/2009 05:00 AM, Marvin Hunkin wrote:
 hi.
 well, the subject that i was taking, and the web page for pinciples of
 visual design, my professor, said i have to had fonts, in the style sheet.
 that was the requirmenet of this site i was doing for a fruit shop.
 
 
 Just as a reality check, let me go over how this works.
 
 You don't have to have any particular fonts on your own computer in
 order to designate them in a web page.
 
 You create a web page on your computer, upload it to the server, and
 after that each visitor who sees the page downloads it to their
 computer where it is displayed (rendered). It is the fonts installed
 on each visitor's computer that determine how the text will be
 displayed on their screens.
 
 If you specify font-families in the stylesheet, you're not DICTATING
 what font must appear, you're only SUGGESTING which fonts you'd like
 to appear. If a font you've requested isn't installed, it doesn't
 show up; that simple.
 
 If you use the stylesheet to ask that some text be rendered in a very
 common font such as Arial, it will be displayed in Arial on the vast
 majority of visitors' computers. If you use a more unusual font, only
 a small number of visitors might have that font and see it on the
 page. Everyone else will see your 2nd or 3rd choice font for that text.
 
 For example, if your stylesheet says:
 
 h1
 {
  font-family: Gothic Rare, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;
 }
 
 ...then the visitor's browser checks to see if it can find a match
 with any of the fonts in the list. Gothic Rare will not be found
 anywhere because I just made it up. Helvetica is far from universally
 installed, but Arial is extremely common so most people will see the
 text in Arial. If none of those three fonts is found, 'sans-serif'
 tells the browser to use whatever its default sans serif font is
 which might easily be different on every computer.
 
 A sans serif font is a font with no serifs. See also:
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sans_serif
 
 Does that help clarify any of this?
 
 Regards,
 
 Paul
 __
 
 Paul Novitski
 Juniper Webcraft Ltd.
 http://juniperwebcraft.com
 
 
 
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