|  | Posted by Spartanicus on 06/06/05 22:55 
"Alan J. Flavell" <flavell@ph.gla.ac.uk> wrote:
 >That gives us yet more reason *not* to specify Verdana in an author
 >stylesheet.
 >
 >I'm sure it's a perfectly fine choice for an individual to make in the
 >privacy of their own browser, and at a size of their choosing
 
 User setting: Verdana reduced in size by a factor Y.
 Author setting: Verdana reduced in size by a factor Y.
 Result: Verdana reduced in size by a factor 2xY = microfont.
 
 The same thing but somewhat less drastic happens when using most other
 sans serif fonts as the user font.
 
 To avoid this, specifying a sans serif font as the user preferred font
 should be accompanied with a browser minimum font size setting equal to
 what the user wants to see as the body font size.
 
 This in turn prevents non body text from being displayed at a reduced
 size which results in losing the ability to de-emphasize text. For
 example I like my body text displayed in Verdana @ 13px, but I can
 comfortably read Verdana down to 10px. Due to the necessary minimum font
 size setting of 13px I see content that has appropriately been sized
 down at the bigger size of 13px. This makes it harder to distinguish
 body text from for example side bar/panel content.
 
 Many find TNR and most other serif fonts not pleasant to read on screen
 @ the typical body text size. I'm sympathetic to authors who want to
 suggest a sans serif font for their sites for the many users that don't
 change the default font in their browsers. Some suggest that authors
 should not do that and that they should instead show the user how to
 change the font locally. This I consider bad advice, a IE user cannot
 specify a minimum font size.
 
 --
 Spartanicus
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