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by chrismorgan
2223 days ago
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To you and anyone else with this opinion: try disabling the `code { font-feature-settings: "ss01" 1, "ss02"; }` rule in the CSS, which will disable the Poly variant, and let me know how it feels. It seems possible to me that it’s actually the use of a true serif monospace font (>95% of monospace fonts used these days are sans-serif, and >95% of the remainder are slab serif) that’s throwing you off, more than the strict monospacedness of it, and I’d like to try that hypothesis out. (In early development of the visual style, I used only the font with no spacing or colour hints, but I found the monospace Triplicate too similar to the serif Equity, so that it was sometimes not quite clear enough that it was code; that was the reason why I put the background colour on inline code rather than only on code blocks, even though that wouldn’t be done in a printed manuscript, which is a style I am loosely imitating in part.) |
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Ultimately you're never going to win a discussion about type-faces because they're entirely personal preference. For example I find most proportional fonts to be too narrow and harder to read so much prefer the typically wider glyphs of monospaced type-faces. To the extent that the font I used on one of my blogs was rounder letters. I then had complaints that others found it "unreadable" and preferred something narrower.
I'm sure there will always be a sweet spot where more than average number of readers will be content however the web would be a little duller if everyone converged on that same type-face. So I'm willing to take a marginal hit on readability (and let's be honest, the different is almost always only marginal) for the sake of websites having their own personalities. The alternative if people can just toggle Reader View in Firefox (or whatever the equivalent is in other browsers)