
From the start of the web -- at thing since Netscape Aircrewman 4.x -- it has been possibility to size the book on a web page. This is typically finished done the View agenda.
This was fine in the early, primitive life of the web, when page layouts were simple and simple. Want the font to be ternion arithmetic operation larger? No question! Pump it up until your persuasion treat; you're probable to break the design, because there's cute little design at all.
But this was a time long before the web had transmute a papers for full-blown applications, with structure, concentrated, almost GUI-like designs.
The standard web design steering is that you should generally produce web page layouts that work at:
- the alternative font size (obviously)
- one size below the alternative font size
- one size above the alternative font size
I fit in, and you should be experimentation for this on your personal websites. The accessible holder equivalents in least browsers are:
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Ctrl + 0
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Reset font size to default
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Ctrl + +
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Make font one size larger
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Ctrl + -
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Make font one size smaller
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(yes, ownership down the Ctrl key and point scrolling your individual whorl wheel deeds, too, but no real software engineer would use that.)
It is influential to let the selfish person control their browse experience. But I think that the handed-down performing of font-only spectator filler is a answer whose time has come and gone. There's a better way. Browser was the first spectator to introduce full page zoom as an unconventional to handed-down font filler, but Firefox 3 is where least group actually experience it. In construct, in Firefox 3, it's the default page filler modality.
Note that "Move Book Lone" is uncurbed. And for good reason. Study for yourself. Here's the Digg web page victimisation old-school Netscape 4.x style font scaling.
Browser Font Climb: Default
Browser Font Climb: Size +1
Browser Font Climb: Size +2
Digg follows the design rule of hitchhike I recommended preceding: it scales to font size +1, but beyond that, no bets square measure off. With the fonts at +2, the top agenda is scrunched, the search box trimmed, and the digg book square measure spilling out concluded the boxes. The "least past" transportation element has completely disappeared! Nowadays study this with the newer performing of full page zooming:
Browser Full Page Move Climb: Default
Browser Full Page Move Climb: Size +1
Browser Full Page Move Climb: Size +2
While the page does get wider, the full page move performing has terrific advantages:
- Full page move deeds on almost all web page in the world, with no changes any by the web designers
- Full page move scales right, far beyond the +1/-1 sizes that you can reasonably reckon from handed-down spectator font filler approaches.
To prove that full page move scales like nobody's business, here's a screenshot I captured of the Digg web page armoured to fit the whole dimension of my 1920 x 1080 monitor. In relation, decreasing the fonts beyond +2 results in a untidy, undecipherable mess.
Honestly, I can't see little use for handed-down spectator font filler. It's increasingly delicate on today's web. I wish more than browsers would take the lead from Firefox 3, and adopt full page move as the new alternative page filler method.