Nick Sabalausky wrote:
"Walter Bright" <newshou...@digitalmars.com> wrote in message news:hspj3m$1c9...@digitalmars.com...
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Web sites should avoid setting specific font sizes, so low vision users can enlarge it.

I agree a lot with most of this, but any web browser that doesn't scale so-called fixed-size fonts when zooming has a broken, archaic zoom function, period.
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Correct.  Indeed, here's a post I once made here
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=2384051749
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"6. For partially sighted persons, there is no way to adjust text size. You say "wow, they are demanding", this is something really easy to do."

Yes there is a way. Just stop using Internet Exploiter and get yourself a real web browser. But still....
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But you could well ask: Is it right to punish people for using broken browsers? Especially if you're going out of your way to do so by specifying font sizes in pt or px. I've always told people it just shouldn't be done.

Moreover, some have sensibly pointed out that web authors shouldn't change the body text size from the default, since the user's default is the size the user is comfortable with.

But maybe it's acceptable if all you're doing is compensating for the font you've chosen looking a little bigger or smaller at the same point size than the default Times New Roman. That said: - somebody might have set a different font as default in browser settings or a user stylesheet - who decreed that the factory default in all graphical browsers shall be Times New Roman, anyway?

Stewart.

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