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Technorati Chart for 'font'

Articles Tagged "font":

Cairo ¬

2010-06-10

Cairo is a remastered true type version of the Mac OS6 classic font originally designed by Susan Kare. It includes all your favourites, like cow dog, grapes and omelet.

That’d be “dog cow”, not “cow dog”, but I guess I can let that one slide for the rush of fond memories. Moof!

Update: Yes, the quoted description is actually riddled with inaccuracies: ‘Mac OS6’ should be ‘System 6’ and ‘true type’, ‘TrueType’. I was too lazy and pained to paraphrase.

Top Ten Programming Fonts ¬

2009-05-19

Dan Benjamin:

Inconsolata is my favorite monospaced font, and it’s free. [… It] is designed to be used with anti-aliasing enabled, but it’s surprisingly legible even at very small sizes.

I’ve long been a 9pt Monaco—no anti-aliasing—guy. Yesterday, after testing the freely available fonts with a unique zero from the ten that Dan reviews, I came to the same conclusion: 11pt Inconsolata, anti-aliased, is roughly the same size as my old favorite and is just as readable, if not more so.

Unlike John Gruber, I did not find Consolas, or any others except for Inconsolata, to pass the “mm/ww” anti-aliasing test at small sizes.

Meet Em (No Relation) ¬

2008-01-10

I’ve been using em-based text-sizing on this site for a number years using Richard Rutter’s methods and have done well by them. He recently expanded upon his tricks for A List Apart and proved the consistency you can achieve with them.

But there’s one thing that’s occasionally in the back of my mind: what exactly is an em? I had some remembrance that it originally got its name from some aspect of the size of a capital M, but that’s about it.

I must have glossed over Richard’s definition having read the article too many times:

“Classically, an em (pronounced emm) is a typographer’s unit of horizontal spacing and is a sliding (relative) measure. One em is a distance equal to the text size.”

Oh, that’s right, it’s the height of the font. Actually, there’s more to it than that, especially depending on whether you’re a typographer, a type designer, or a software engineer. Font Beureu’s Type 101 blog has the full details (including illustrations) in their post The Em. Go read it.

I’ll leave you with the following excerpt (and many thanks directed at Grant Hutchinson for noting the article):

“In my view, the em is a fundamental unit of typography. It plays a critical role in the design of a typeface, in the technology to compose and render the typeface, and finally in the decisions made by the typographer when setting the type. In fact, from the type designer’s point of view, the em is what forms the basic module used to compose letters into words, words into lines, and lines into paragraphs. It makes movable type possible.”

New Feature: Supplemental Content & Blogroll ¬

2006-07-23

I’ve added a new supplemental content block to the bottom of this page (and will eventually be added to other pages) which currently contains my Required Reading list (i.e. my blogroll). The sites listed there are the most important or most useful out of all my syndicated subscriptions and I’ll be keeping it up to date. It’s also sorted by my current preference.

I have multiple reasons for doing this: 1) to give a little context to the site (what I’m reading), 2) to link to the sites that I feel deserve the traffic, and 3) as a marketing ploy (hopefully, somehow, it’ll come back around).

The design is something that I’ve been working on for a little while now, but I think it’s ready to be released into the wild. I don’t think that it’s quite complete as it’s a little tricky to implement in CSS and I think it needs a few other tweaks here and there.

Also, there’s currently an unimplemented piece of the supplemental content section labeled “Something Else”. I’m taking suggestions as what would be most useful there. There are some implementation considerations, so I may rule out some suggestions for those reasons, but please do comment with your ideas.

Update: I’ve also tweaked the article title font and how its underlining works. I just really liked the way I had implemented it in the supplemental content and I was never happy with the titles anyway.