Font-face and vertical position of text - position

I want to use After Disaster font on my website, but I can't achieve the same vertical position of displayed text in different browsers. Even more - it is dependent on system too. You may test this:
http://jsfiddle.net/z7rby/1/
On Linux Google Chrome displays text about one pixel higher than Firefox and Opera. On Windows Google Chrome displays it in the middle of background. What can I do with that?

There is no way to solve this problem. You have to accept that fonts will be rendered slightly differently on different systems, and find another way to achieve your visual goals.
You can control your layout via positioning CSS e.g. width, height but not font rendering.
If that level of control is not "good enough" then you can write browser-dependent CSS (tutorials exist online) to compensate for differences.
But please remember the goal in all computing is "good enough": Perfection is not cost-effective!
Once you have achieved a level where further improvements require a certain effort, but there are more important things to spend that effort on, that is the point when you have finished.

Related

How to change height and width of page layout in google sites

When I create a site there's a lot of white space around a section. That's the only section and I'd like to have very little margin.
Is ti possible to change the margin / padding?
It helps to distinguish between classic and new Google Sites when asking questions, as the answer is not always the same for each.
Assuming you mean new Google Sites then as far as your question is concerned, the answer is no.
New Google Sites is pretty good at automatically configuring the output for different sizes, and orientation, of screens to support monitors, tablets, and phones. The trade off for that is that you loose some control over how the content is displayed; including margins and padding.
You can embed your own HTML, and have far more control of what happens with that section of display. But not outside of it.

Full screen responsive horizontal website

I am trying to find the best method in order to create a horizontal website, full screen and if possible responsive, minimum width to be for tablets. The thing is that I need also the horizontal scrolling with the mousewheel, and I saw that fullPage.js doesn't support that or at least i couldn't manage to make it work on this plugin.
Anyway, I need an idea on building the template, with full screen sections displayed inline - I will be very grateful for any tip. Thanks.
Making horizontally responsive is bit tricky and requires a lot of effort.. There can be many many design approaches for making it responsive. It can't just be described with JSFiddle snippets..
However, I have something for you that will definitely get you started with "Horizontal Responsive Layout designing"..
This is must guide / tutorial for people who want to get started with Horizontal Responsive approach
http://tympanus.net/codrops/2012/04/02/responsive-horizontal-layout/
you could use one of the tools listed in the following links
http://www.cssdesignawards.com/articles/15-excellent-jquery-plugins-to-spice-up-your-sites/44/
http://jquery-plugins.net/scrollit-js-jquery-plugin-for-scrolling-pages
or you could also mix raw js/jquery with anchor links and add animations when clicked. in taht case you can scroll down using mouse wheel and also have fancy animations when a link is clicked
regarding responsiveness use css media queries

Is there a magnifying ruler to measure pixels?

I have been looking for this for a while:
There are a ton of ruler extensions for all the common browsers but I can't find one that has a magnifying glass. Can anyone help me out please?
I'm talking about a magnifying glass like the Awesome Color Picker extension in Chrome:
The ruler extensions I've used really hurt my eyes when trying to measure anything to pixel precision.
Any browser is fine with me.
Note #1: This is not about seeing the width of elements through 'inspect element'. I need to find the precise number of pixels between any two points on a web page.
Note #2: Zooming in the browser doesn't do it either because some of the pixels change when I zoom.
Thanks in advance!
I am not sure if this is what you were looking for, but it might be worth checking out. It has zooming in on pixels, up to 3200%.
http://matthiasschuetz.com/pixelzoomer/
It's a FireFox add-on. I am not affiliated with the add-on at all.
Check out xScope from IconFactory. http://xscopeapp.com I use it all the time for development layouts. It's got several tools, including rulers, guides, a tool for dynamically measuring elements, and a loupe for viewing an enlarged part of your layouts. It's not a browser plugin, but I find that this makes it actually MORE useful.

Working arround font rendering issues in all major browsers

Since long time i been having a real problem with the different ways that each browser display text.
Sure you have noticed that even when you create a stylesheet specifying everything about the font properties, still every browser display the same text with some differences, the usual problem is the font weight, that even if you specify it different browsers display it different ways.
I would like to know if some as come with a solution. Not turning the text into a image.
Thanks.
EDIT:
This is a example of the problem. On the left Firefox and right IE. However i have defined in the CSS font family, weight, size and still they render the fonts different.
Snapshot
Do you mean that on one browser its bold and another one its normal? A reset should fix that, but if it doesn't, it might be something overriding that.
If you're talking about fonts looking different, it is possible - for example, since Google Chrome / Chromium sandboxes the renderer process, the font rendering won't be affected by other parts of the system, and I believe that it uses some sort of special font rendering. To be honest, on my Linux install, I do get bolder fonts on Chromium, but Firefox displays them fine.
There's SIFR (as pointed above), but it needs Flash and it is a bit heavy. There's also Cufon http://cufon.shoqolate.com/ that uses Javascript. Could you show a screencast so we know what's the problem? Thanks.
SIFR is a good solution, as long as you're only trying to control the appearance of small chunks of text (headings, design elements, etc.)
Beyond that, browsers are perfectly allowed to render text any way they want, and getting it pixel-perfect between browsers and operating systems is usually not even desirable for larger chunks of text. Users will have different accessibility settings and anti-aliasing settings which are tuned to the way they want to read text, and in general websites should try to respect that.
You can use SIFR.
Although this problem is already about a week old, here is a solution that I found, that might be related:
http://blog.wolffmyren.com/2009/05/28/jquery-fadeinfadeout-ie-cleartype-glitch/
If you're not using jQuery, try removing the filter attribute from the elements that are displaying non-Cleartype'd text and it should work, according to that blog post.

Anti-aliased font in HTML page

Is there a good way to create crisp, clear, LARGE font in webpages? I need to create a tag cloud effect on my homepage with different font sizes and colours.
I've got it set up in HTML/CSS but on the older browsers or OS's which don't support anti-aliasing as default it looks a bit... crappy.
I've played with sIFR, which worked beautifully but gave me some horrible load effects but I'm now wondering if there is a way to:
a) do browser/OS detection to split users by browser/OS combinations which I KNOW support anti-aliasing (they get raw HTML) and by "others" who get an image tag.
b) Some sort of JavaScript to add antialiasing?
c) Permanent solution to load a BG image in the div and hide the HTML text. (I know, I know, Google horror stories about de-indexing... but is it possible?)
a) Of course you can use browser detection. The easiest way to do this is probably using jQuery's browser method. (jQuery is an awesome JavaScript library that makes a lot of JS-development easier in case you haven't heard)
Depending on what browser (or OS) results you get, you could present the user with different solutions, from normal text to something like a Flash solution.
However, I advise against it. Things look better on new machines than old ones. That's just the way it is, which is why I recommend against spending precious time on minor glitches in older browsers. -- Unless users with older browsers are your main demographic of course. In this case, how about you just do it in Flash altogether? No use coding up two solutions if one always works, right?
b) You can in fact create anti-aliased text via JavaScript. Have a look at my project Die Stimme Gottes ("Voice of God" -- not for the religiously squeamish) for an example. In this project, I used the excellent typeface.js for this.
c) Just use CSS, maybe?
h1.welcome {
background: url('the-welcome-image.png') no-repeat;
color: transparent;
}
+1 Hank's comment. You have very little to gain by doing this. Some desktop browsers (including IE7+ and Safari) turn on anti-aliasing by default even when it's off at an OS level, and modern (post-XP) OSs tend to turn it on by default anyway. By forcing AA on the rest, you'll:
(+) improve the display a little for IE6 and XP+Firefox users who unwittingly don't have AA
(-) make loading slower for everyone (but especially users of limited mobile devices)
(-) defeat preferred font sizes
(-) unnecessarily annoy the luddites who deliberately disable anti-aliasing because it's “all blurry”(*)
(*: there are limited cases where this does even make sense, particularly for old, fuzzy CRT monitors.)
By the looks of it the best methods (in no real order) are:
1) Use an image. If you rely on SEO for the site then by all means add html and hide it using css using one of these methods
2) typeface.js - JS which will work across most modern browsers. Has some bugs and glitches but works nicely. If you're going to force anti-aliasing on your users then this works. Use sparingly. Author working on Opera and IE8 compatability though...
2) sIFR - Excellent script which dynamically replaces your selected areas of text with flash movies. Again some bugs and glitches, but if you're simply interested in awesome looking font then this is perfect. Increases your page load though, so as ever more is less, use sparingly.
I tend not to go with JS heavy solutions, as I like to have lightning quick page loads, but if you HAVE to have some good looking fonts, then these seem to be the most graceful and simple methods.
-webkit-font-smoothing:antialiased;
Force background color, redefining it for the class or element with the same background color. It works.
span.your_class {
writing-mode: tb-rl;
filter: flipv fliph;
background-color: #006cb8 !important;
}
Flash or Silverlight are your best bets for great looking font rendering

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