Saturday, December 16, 2006

Which Font to Use?

To change the font settings in the Windows version of Internet Explorer, from the View menu choose Options. Internet Explorer opens the Options dialog. Make sure the General Tab is selected.

Next, click the Font Setting button to display the Fonts dialog, with the equivalent Font tab from the Preferences dialog in the Macintosh version of Internet Explorer.

Web browsers use two different font-proportional fonts and fixed-width fonts. If you’re unfamiliar with the difference, in proportional fonts characters are different widths, so the letter I is thinner than a capital W. It’s easiest to read in a proportional font, which is why all books use them, In contrast, in a fixed-width font; every character is the same width. Old typewriters tended to use fixed-width fonts. The main utility of fixed-width fonts in today’s Internet is that output from spreadsheets and other columnar documents can be displayed so all the columns line up correctly.

Almost all the text you see on the Web uses proportional font, so select a different font from the Proportional Font drop-down menu to change how most web pages display. Feel free to change the fixed-width font s well, but you’re unlikely to see the results of that change often.

On windows, Times New Roman works pretty well, so you may not feel the need to change it. If you do, try Comic San MS if that’s installed on your system. I’ve used that in Windows and rather like it. On the Macintosh I strongly recommend you switch your font from the standard Times to New York or another font that was designed for screen display (They tend to have names of cities). Once you’ve made your choices, click OK button to save them.

Don’t worry about the Language, Character Set or Font Encoding settings unless you use alternate languages on your computer.

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