Chapter Thirteen. Working with Browsers Part III: Typography

A long with positioning and color, typography is a basic and essential tool of design. Print designers spend years studying the history and application of type. They learn to distinguish between faces that, to the uninitiated, look almost identical, such as Arial versus Helvetica. When these traditionally educated designers come to the web, with its limited and contradictory typographic toolsets, they have often been less well equipped to navigate its tight and rocky shoals than those from a nontraditional design background.

Size Matters

Windows, UNIX, and Macintosh come with different installed fonts, at different default resolutions, and often with different default rendering styles—from ...

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