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Posted by richard on 09/19/06 16:35
"Andy Dingley" <dingbat@codesmiths.com> wrote in message
news:1158656122.571215.22870@e3g2000cwe.googlegroups.com...
>
> richard wrote:
>
>> Never did it that way before. As fonts are seperated by commas, and many
>> have two or more words for a name, it doesn't become a problem without
>> the
>> quotes.
>
> You're still not getting the "standards" thing though.
>
> Yes, unquoted font names work. It's still bad practice to not quote
> them though, because the standard says they should be:
> "Font names containing any such characters or whitespace should be
> quoted:"
> http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/fonts.html#font-family-prop
>
> _If_ you quote them and it doesn't work, that's a browser problem. If
> you don't quote them and it doesn't work, then that's your problem.
> Take any sufficiently complex piece of work and you'll run into this
> issue. Maybe not for font-family, maybe not today, but sooner or later
> you get bitten by this stuff. It's the difference between IE and a web
> browser. Start working around mis-use of the standards and before long
> the whole thing is in pieces.
>
> Incidentally, font family names for the generics nust _not_ be quoted,
> and font family names for fonts with the same name as the generics must
> be quoted. Quoting one of these names may stop it being recognised
> correctly as a generic.
>
Ok. So would that be single or double quotes?
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