On 31 Aug 2011 Tim Hill  wrote:

> In article <bd98740b52.r...@user.minijem.plus.com>, Richard Porter
> <r...@minijem.plus.com> wrote:
>> I've just noticed that the tag <font size=+1> inside a heading which
>> has a larger font size results in a smaller font, not a larger one. I
>> suspect that the +/-whatever is interpretted as relative to the
>> default paragraph font size not the prevailing header font size. This
>> doesn't seem logical. What is the correct behaviour?

> On your part? Use CSS.  ;-D

Actually I didn't need the font tag at all. It was originally in a 
paragraph where it worked as intended.

> I guess you mean something like:

> <h1>This is to test <font size="+1">Font Size</font> inside h1</h1>

Correct.

> This renders the same in NetSurf, Firefox etc., and yes, the size=± is by
> default relative to the standard default size of '3', not any heading it
> may be within.

Then there doesn't seem to be any point in size=±n.

> I hope you have www.w3schools.com in your bookmarks.  :-)

-- 
Richard Porter                        http://www.minijem.plus.com/
                                      mailto:r...@minijem.plus.com
I don't want a "user experience" - I just want stuff that works.

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