Read CSS: The Definitive Guide, 3rd Edition Online

Authors: Eric A. Meyer

Tags: #COMPUTERS / Web / Page Design

CSS: The Definitive Guide, 3rd Edition (18 page)

Stretching and Adjusting Fonts

There are two font properties that appear in
CSS2, but not in CSS2.1. They've been dropped from CSS2.1 because, despite being in the
specification for years, no browser has bothered to implement either one. The first
allows for the horizontal stretching
of fonts, and the
second allows for intelligent scaling of substituted fonts when the author's first
choice is not available. First, let's look at stretching.

font-stretch

Values:

normal
|
wider
|
narrower
|
ultra-condensed
|
extra-condensed
|
condensed
|
semi-condensed
|
semi-expanded
|
expanded
|
extra-expanded
|
ultra-expanded
|
inherit

Initial value:

normal

Applies to:

All elements

Inherited:

Yes

As you might expect from the value names, this property is used to make a font's
characters fatter or skinnier. It behaves very much like the absolute-size keywords
(e.g.,
xx-large
) for the
font-size
property, with a range of absolute values and two values that
let the author alter a font's stretching up or down. For example, an author might decide
to stress the text in a strongly emphasized element by stretching the font characters to
be wider than their parent element's font characters, as shown in
Figure 5-21
:

strong {font-stretch: wider;}

Figure 5-21. Stretching font characters

Tip

Figure 5-21
was altered using Photoshop,
since web browsers do not support
font-stretch
as
of this writing.

The similarly unimplemented process of adjusting font size is a little more
complicated.

font-size-adjust

Values:

|
none
|
inherit

Initial value:

none

Applies to:

All elements

Inherited:

Yes

The goal of this property is to preserve legibility when the font used is not the
author's first choice. Because of the differences in font appearance, one font may be
legible at a certain size, while another font at the same size is difficult or
impossible to read.

The factors that influence a font's legibility are its size and its x-height. The
number that results from dividing the x-height by the
font-size
is referred to as the
aspect value
. Fonts with
higher aspect values tend to be legible as the font's size is reduced; conversely, fonts
with low aspect values become illegible more quickly.

A good example is to compare the common fonts Verdana and Times. Consider
Figure 5-22
and the following markup, which
shows both fonts at a
font-size
of
10px
:

p {font-size: 10px;}
p.cl1 {font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;}
p.cl2 {font-family: Times, serif; }

Figure 5-22. Comparing Verdana and Times

The text in Times is much harder to read than the Verdana text. This is partly due to
the limitations of pixel-based display, but it is also because Times simply becomes
harder to read at smaller font sizes.

As it turns out, the ratio of x-height to character size in Verdana is 0.58, whereas
in Times it is 0.46. What you can do in this case is declare the aspect value
of
Verdana, and the user agent will adjust the size of the text that's actually used. This
is accomplished using the formula:

Declared
font-size
× (
font-size-adjust
value ÷ aspect value of available font)
= Adjusted
font-size

So, in a situation where Times is used instead of Verdana, the adjustment is as
follows:

10px
× (
0.58
÷
0.46
) =
12.6px

which leads to the result shown in
Figure
5-23
:

p {font: 10px Verdana, sans-serif; font-size-adjust: 0.58;}
p.cl2 {font-family: Times, serif; }

Figure 5-23. Adjusting Times

Tip

Figure 5-23
was altered using Photoshop,
since very few web browsers support
font-size-adjust
as of this writing.

Of course, to allow a user agent to intelligently make size adjustments, you have to
know the aspect value of your first-choice font. There is no way in CSS2 to simply get
the value from the font, and many fonts may not have the information available in the
first place.

The font Property

All of these properties are very sophisticated, of
course, but using them all could get a little tedious:

h1 {font-family: Verdana, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 30px;
font-weight: 900; font-style: italic; font-variant: small-caps;}
h2 {font-family: Verdana, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 24px;
font-weight: bold; font-style: italic; font-variant: normal;}

Some of this problem could be solved by grouping selectors, but wouldn't it be easier
to combine everything into a single property? Enter
font
, which is the shorthand property for all the other font properties (and
a little more besides).

font

Values:

[[ || || ]?
[ / ]? ] |
caption
|
icon
|
menu
|
message-box
|
small-caption
|
status-bar
|
inherit

Initial value:

Refer to individual properties

Applies to:

All elements

Inherited:

Yes

Percentages:

Calculated with respect to the parent element for and
with respect to the element's for

Computed value:

See individual properties (
font-style
,
etc.)

Generally speaking, a
font
declaration can have
any one value from each of the listed font properties, or else a "system font" value
(described in the section "
Using System
Fonts
"). Therefore, the preceding example could be shortened as follows:

h1 {font: italic 900 small-caps 30px Verdana, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;}
h2 {font: bold normal italic 24px Verdana, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;}

and have exactly the same effect (illustrated by
Figure 5-24
).

Figure 5-24. Typical font rules

I say that the styles "could be" shortened in this way because there are a few other
possibilities, thanks to the relatively loose way in which
font
can be written. If you look closely at the preceding example, you'll see
that the first three values don't occur in the same order. In the
h1
rule, the first three values are the values for
font-style
,
font-weight
,
and
font-variant
, in that order, whereas in the
second, they're ordered
font-weight
,
font-variant
, and
font-style
. There is nothing wrong here because these three can be written in
any order. Furthermore, if any of them has a value of
normal
, that can be left out altogether. Therefore, the following rules are
equivalent to the previous example:

h1 {font: italic 900 small-caps 30px Verdana, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;}
h2 {font: bold italic 24px Verdana, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;}

In this example, the value of
normal
was left out
of the
h2
rule, but the effect is exactly the same as
in the preceding example.

It's important to realize, however, that this free-for-all situation applies only to
the first three values of
font
. The last two are much
stricter in their behavior. Not only must
font-size
and
font-family
appear in that order as the last two
values in the declaration, but both must always be present in a
font
declaration. Period, end of story. If either is left out, then the
entire rule will be invalidated and very likely ignored completely by a user agent.
Thus, the following rules will get you the result shown in
Figure 5-25
:

h1 {font: normal normal italic 30px sans-serif;}   /*no problem here */
h2 {font: 1.5em sans-serif;} /* also fine; omitted values set to 'normal' */
h3 {font: sans-serif;} /* INVALID--no 'font-size' provided */
h4 {font: lighter 14px;} /* INVALID--no 'font-family' provided */

Figure 5-25. The necessity of both size and family

Adding the Line Height

So far, we've treated
font
as though it has only five values, which isn't quite true. It is also
possible to set the
line-height
using
font
, despite that fact that
line-height
is a text property, not a font property. It's done as a
sort of addition to the
font-size
value, separated
from it by a forward slash (
/
):

body {font-size: 12px;}
h2 {font: bold italic 200%/1.2 Verdana, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;}

These rules, demonstrated in
Figure
5-26
, set all
h2
elements to be bold and
italic (using face for one of the sans-serif font families), set the
font-size
to
24px
(twice the
body
's size), and set the
line-height
to
28.8px
.

Figure 5-26. Adding line height to the mix

This addition of a value for
line-height
is
entirely optional, just as the first three
font
values are. If you do include a
line-height
,
remember that the
font-size
always comes before
line-height
, never after, and the two are
always separated by a slash.

This may seem repetitive, but it's one of the most common errors made by CSS
authors, so I can't say it enough: the required values for
font
are
font-size
and
font-family
, in that order. Everything else is strictly
optional.

Tip

line-height
is discussed in the next
chapter.

Using Shorthands Properly

It is important to remember that
font
, being a
shorthand property, can act in unexpected ways if you are careless with its use.
Consider the following rules, which are illustrated in
Figure 5-27
:

h1, h2, h3 {font: italic small-caps 250% sans-serif;}
h2 {font: 200% sans-serif;}
h3 {font-size: 150%;}
This is an h1 element
This is an h2 element
This is an h3 element

Figure 5-27. Shorthand changes

Did you notice that the
h2
element is neither
italicized nor small-capped, and that none of the elements are boldfaced? This is the
correct behavior. When the shorthand property
font
is used, any omitted values are reset to their defaults. Thus, the previous example
could be written as follows and still be exactly equivalent:

h1, h2, h3 {font: italic normal small-caps 250% sans-serif;}
h2 {font: normal normal normal 200% sans-serif;}
h3 {font-size: 150%;}

This sets the
h2
element's font style and
variant to
normal
, and the
font-weight
of all three elements to
normal
. This is the expected behavior of shorthand
properties. The
h3
does not suffer the same fate
as the
h2
because you used the property
font-size
, which is not a shorthand property and
therefore affects only its own value.

Using System Fonts

In situations where you want
to make a web page "blend in" with the user's operating system, the system font
values of
font
come in very handy. These are used
to take the font size, family, weight, style, and variant of elements of the
operating system, and apply them to an element. The values are as follows:

caption

Used for captioned controls, such as buttons

icon

Used to label icons

menu

Used in menus—that is, drop-down menus and menu lists

message-box

Used in dialog boxes

small-caption

Used for labeling small controls

status-bar

Used in window status bars

For example, you might want to set the font of a button to be the same as that of
the buttons found in the operating system. For example:

button {font: caption;}

With these values, it is possible to create web-based applications that look very
much like applications native to the user's operating system.

Note that system fonts may only be set as a whole; that is, the font family, size,
weight, style, etc., are all set together. Therefore, the button text from our
previous example will look exactly the same as button text in the operating system,
whether or not the size matches any of the content around the button. You can,
however, alter the individual values once the system font has been set. Thus, the
following rule will make sure the button's font is the same size as its parent
element's font:

button {font: caption; font-size: 1em;}

If you call for a system font and no such font exists on the user's machine, the
user agent may try to find an approximation, such as reducing the size of the
caption
font to arrive at the
small-caption
font. If no such approximation is
possible, then the user agent should use a default font of its own. If it can find a
system font but can't read all of its values, then it should use the default value.
For example, a user agent may be able to find a
status-bar
font but not get any information about whether the font is
small-caps. In that case, the user agent will use the value
normal
for the
small-caps
property.

Tip

User interface styles are discussed in more detail in
Chapter 13
.

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