On Jun 7, 2007, at 1:26 AM, Paul Novitski wrote: > I've never understood the sense of that criterion, e.g. "the page > should survive two [or three] font size enlargements." Doesn't that > depend entirely on what size the smallest font on the page is?
Indeed, it does. We need the real font to be of a readable size, which means the degree of resizability in itself doesn't really matter. > If my vision were so weak that I needed to enlarge text to 1/2-inch > type on the screen, it wouldn't matter whether that required one > click or ten, I'd still need it to become that large. It's not the > number of enlargements that's relevant, it's the size of the > resulting type. I agree 100%. > What I don't know is if there's any kind of a minimum font size that > we should ensure our readers can achieve. I doubt that there is one, > given the variation in vision impairments, but I'll be curious to > know what others think. I use 200% of the default - which on my OS results in 'font-size: 32px', for 'minimum font size' testing. This is based on what I use as "normal" font-family - 'georgia', and I adjust slightly for readability when I use font-families with smaller x-height. Such a test should - in my opinion - not result in severe layout- breaking or overlapping and such. I don't expect a layout, any layout, to survive such a test in a "pixel-perfect" manner, but well enough to not cause reading problems This should cover the need for resizing for normally aging eyes. for visitors up to at least 90 years of age, and I intend to be in, or pass, that age - one day :-) There will always be visitors who need more - larger real font size, Browser-options and AT should cover those needs - as long as we don't build barriers into our designs. regards Georg (on vacation in USA - using a borrowed address to respond ;-) ) ______________________________________________________________________ css-discuss [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.css-discuss.org/mailman/listinfo/css-d IE7 information -- http://css-discuss.incutio.com/?page=IE7 List wiki/FAQ -- http://css-discuss.incutio.com/ Supported by evolt.org -- http://www.evolt.org/help_support_evolt/